| Literature DB >> 2846578 |
C Srisomsap1, K L Richardson, J C Jay, R B Marchase.
Abstract
UDP-glucose:glycoprotein glucose-1-phosphotransferase (Glc-phosphotransferase) catalyzes the transfer of alpha Glc-1-P from UDP-Glc to mannose residues on acceptor glycoproteins. The predominant acceptor for this transfer in rat liver is a glycoprotein of 62 kDa. This acceptor was labeled in liver homogenates through incubation with the 35S-labeled phosphorothioate analogue of UDP-Glc, and its distribution following differential centrifugation was compared to that of the glycoproteins labeled by CMP-[3H]N-acetylneuraminic acid. Whereas 94% of the 3H-labeled macromolecules fractionated to the microsomal pellet, 85% of the 35S-labeled 62-kDa glycoprotein was found in the high-speed supernatant. The distribution of the Glc-phosphotransferase was also examined following differential centrifugation, and the bulk of the activity was found in the 100,000 x g pellet. In contrast to results obtained with the lumenal microsomal markers 4 beta-galactosyltransferase and mannose-6-phosphatase, however, optimal activity of the Glc-phosphotransferase was not dependent on the disruption of microsomal vesicles by detergent. In addition, Glc-phosphotransferase was degraded by exogenous proteases in the absence of detergent, whereas the lumenal markers were not. We conclude, therefore, that the 62-kDa acceptor glycoprotein is cytoplasmic and is glycosylated by the Glc-phosphotransferase at a site accessible to the cytoplasm. This may prove to be a model for the topography of glycosylation of other cytoplasmic glycoproteins as well.Entities:
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Year: 1988 PMID: 2846578
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157