Ohashi M, Ohnishi S. An inhibitory effect of a protein kinase inhibitor, staurosporine, on delivery of endocytosed asialoglycoprotein to lysosome in monolayer culture of rat hepatocytes.
Exp Cell Res 1991;
197:168-75. [PMID:
1959554 DOI:
10.1016/0014-4827(91)90419-u]
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Abstract
An inhibitor of protein kinases, staurosporine (ssp), was found to affect the endocytic pathway of asialoglycoproteins subsequent to endocytosis in monolayer cultures of rat hepatocytes. The effect of 5 or 10 microM staurosporine on the internalization of a synthetic ligand (galBSA-HRP: bovine serum albumin exposing galactose, horseradish peroxidase conjugates) prebound to the cell surface was minimal. The presence of 5, 7, or 10 microM ssp during a 1-h chase period resulted in the ligand remaining in a low density (1.04-1.05 g/ml), nonlysosomal subcellular fraction in a Percoll gradient. The ligand, arrested by 7 microM ssp, was further processed to the lysosome during subsequent incubation in the absence of ssp. Cells maintained the ability to internalize ligand at 37 degrees C for 1 h in the presence of these concentrations of ssp. During a 1-h continuous uptake of 0-50 micrograms/ml nonlabeled ligand, the presence of 7 microM ssp did not cause any decrease in the amount of asialoglycoprotein receptor at the cell surface, which indicates receptor recycling occurred normally. These results suggest a possible involvement of protein kinase(s), which can be inhibited by ssp, in the delivery of endocytosed ligand to the lysosome, but not in ligand endocytosis and receptor recycling.
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