Literature DB >> 2828380

Targeting of secretory vesicles to cytoplasmic domains in AtT-20 and PC-12 cells.

L Matsuuchi1, K M Buckley, A W Lowe, R B Kelly.   

Abstract

Organelles are not uniformly distributed throughout the cytoplasm but have preferred locations that vary between tissues and during development. To investigate organelle targeting to cytoplasmic domains we have taken advantage of the mouse pituitary cell line, AtT-20, which, when induced to extend long processes, accumulates dense core secretory granules at the tips of the processes. During mitosis, these secretory granules accumulate along the plane of division. Protein synthesis is not mandatory for such redistribution of secretory granules. To explore the specificity of the redistribution we have used transfected AtT-20 cells that express the immunoglobulin kappa light chain. While the endogenous hormone ACTH is found in secretory granules, the kappa chain is a marker for organelles involved in constitutive secretion. By immunofluorescence, kappa also accumulates at the tips of growing processes, and along the midline of dividing cells, suggesting that the redistribution of vesicles is not specific for dense-core secretory granules. Since there is evidence for selective organelle transport along processes in neuronal cells, the rat pheochromocytoma cell PC-12 was transfected with DNA encoding markers for regulated and constitutive secretory vesicles. Again regulated and constitutive vesicles co-distribute, even in cells grown in the presence of nerve growth factor. We suggest that at least in the cells studied here, cytoskeletal elements normally carry exocytotic organelles to the surface; when the cytoskeletal elements coalesce in an extending process, exocytotic organelles of both the constitutive and regulated pathway are transported nonselectively to the tips of the cytoskeletal elements where they accumulate.

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Year:  1988        PMID: 2828380      PMCID: PMC2114966          DOI: 10.1083/jcb.106.2.239

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Cell Biol        ISSN: 0021-9525            Impact factor:   10.539


  25 in total

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6.  Fading of immunofluorescence during microscopy: a study of the phenomenon and its remedy.

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7.  In vitro mutagenesis of trypsinogen: role of the amino terminus in intracellular protein targeting to secretory granules.

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8.  Identification of a transmembrane glycoprotein specific for secretory vesicles of neural and endocrine cells.

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9.  Effect of microtubule assembly status on the intracellular processing and surface expression of an integral protein of the plasma membrane.

Authors:  A A Rogalski; J E Bergmann; S J Singer
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10.  Identification of two lysosomal membrane glycoproteins.

Authors:  J W Chen; T L Murphy; M C Willingham; I Pastan; J T August
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  24 in total

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Review 6.  The cell biology of the nerve terminal.

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7.  Retroviral transfer of a human tyrosine hydroxylase cDNA in various cell lines: regulated release of dopamine in mouse anterior pituitary AtT-20 cells.

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8.  AP-1A controls secretory granule biogenesis and trafficking of membrane secretory granule proteins.

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10.  Overexpression of beta 2-microglobulin in transgenic mouse islet beta cells results in defective insulin secretion.

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