Abstrakt: |
Apo-A-I, the major protein component of high density lipoproteins, appears intracellularly as an intermediate precursor (pro-apo-A-I) with a hexapeptide extension (RHFWQQ) at its amino terminus. Proteolytic processing of pro-apo-A-I to apo-A-I has been shown to occur extracellularly in cell and organ cultures from rat and human tissues. Recently, however, intracellular conversion has been detected in chickens. To determine what distinguishes and regulates these two processing methods, the proteolytic processing and secretion of apo-A-I was studied by metabolic labeling in chick hepatocytes and in Hep-G2 cells (derived from a human hepatocellular carcinoma). The proportions of intracellular and secreted pro-apo-A-I and apo-A-I were measured by sequencing NH2-terminal portions of the proteins and determining the location of radio-labeled amino acids. Chick hepatocytes cultured in the absence of hormones or fetal bovine serum secreted primarily processed apo-A-I (83%). In the presence of serum these cells secreted only pro-apo-A-I, whereas incubation with a combination of hormones (insulin, triiodothyronine, dexamethasone) resulted in secretion of a nearly equal mixture of the pro- and processed forms of the protein. In contrast, Hep-G2 cells, maintained in the absence of serum, secreted only pro-apo-A-I; when grown in the presence of serum these cells secreted a mixture of pro- and processed apo-A-I. Under conditions in which chick hepatocytes and Hep-G2 cells secreted both forms of the protein, a mixture of pro- and processed apo-A-I was also found intracellularly; when only the pro-form was secreted, the cells likewise contained only pro-apo-A-I. Under all the above conditions, the secreted apo-A-I exhibited similar isoform patterns in two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. These data show that both chick hepatocytes and human hepatoma cells are capable of intracellularly processing pro-apo-A-I to apo-A-I, and that the extent of intracellular processing is controlled by the cell's hormonal environment. |