Cargando…

Ligand-mediated internalization, recycling, and downregulation of the epidermal growth factor receptor in vivo [published erratum appears in J Cell Biol 1990 Jan;110(1):following 227]

EGF receptor internalization, recycling,a nd downregulation were evaluated in liver parenchyma as a function of increasing doses of injected EGF. The effect of ligand occupancy in vivo on the kinetics and extent of internalization was studied with changes in the receptor content of isolated plasmale...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1989
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2115960/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2592403
_version_ 1782140779253202944
collection PubMed
description EGF receptor internalization, recycling,a nd downregulation were evaluated in liver parenchyma as a function of increasing doses of injected EGF. The effect of ligand occupancy in vivo on the kinetics and extent of internalization was studied with changes in the receptor content of isolated plasmalemma and endosome fractions evaluated by direct binding, Scatchard analysis, and Western blotting. For all doses of injected EGF, receptor was lost from the plasmalemma and accumulated in endosomes in a time- and dose-dependent fashion. However, at doses of injected EGF equivalent to less than or equal to 50% surface receptor occupancy (i.e., less than or equal to 1 microgram/100 g body weight), receptor levels returned by 120 min to initial values. This return was resistant to cycloheximide and therefore did not represent newly synthesized receptor. Neither was the return due to replenishment by an intracellular pool of low-affinity receptors as such a pool could not be detected by Scatchard analysis or Western blotting. Therefore, receptor return was due to the recycling of previously internalized receptor. At doses of injected EGF greater than 50% receptor occupancy, net receptor loss-i.e., downregulation-was observed by evaluating the receptor content of total particulate fractions of liver homogenates. At the higher saturating doses of injected EGF (5 and 10 micrograms/100 g body weight), the majority of surface receptor content was lost by 15 min and remained low for at least an additional 105 min. As the kinetics of ligand clearance from the circulation and liver parenchyma were similar for all doses of EGF injected, then the ligand-mediated regulation of surface receptor content and downregulation were not a result of a prolonged temporal interaction of ligand with receptor. Rather, the phenomena must be a consequence of the absolute concentrations of EGF interacting with receptor at the cell surface and/or in endosomes.
format Text
id pubmed-2115960
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 1989
publisher The Rockefeller University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-21159602008-05-01 Ligand-mediated internalization, recycling, and downregulation of the epidermal growth factor receptor in vivo [published erratum appears in J Cell Biol 1990 Jan;110(1):following 227] J Cell Biol Articles EGF receptor internalization, recycling,a nd downregulation were evaluated in liver parenchyma as a function of increasing doses of injected EGF. The effect of ligand occupancy in vivo on the kinetics and extent of internalization was studied with changes in the receptor content of isolated plasmalemma and endosome fractions evaluated by direct binding, Scatchard analysis, and Western blotting. For all doses of injected EGF, receptor was lost from the plasmalemma and accumulated in endosomes in a time- and dose-dependent fashion. However, at doses of injected EGF equivalent to less than or equal to 50% surface receptor occupancy (i.e., less than or equal to 1 microgram/100 g body weight), receptor levels returned by 120 min to initial values. This return was resistant to cycloheximide and therefore did not represent newly synthesized receptor. Neither was the return due to replenishment by an intracellular pool of low-affinity receptors as such a pool could not be detected by Scatchard analysis or Western blotting. Therefore, receptor return was due to the recycling of previously internalized receptor. At doses of injected EGF greater than 50% receptor occupancy, net receptor loss-i.e., downregulation-was observed by evaluating the receptor content of total particulate fractions of liver homogenates. At the higher saturating doses of injected EGF (5 and 10 micrograms/100 g body weight), the majority of surface receptor content was lost by 15 min and remained low for at least an additional 105 min. As the kinetics of ligand clearance from the circulation and liver parenchyma were similar for all doses of EGF injected, then the ligand-mediated regulation of surface receptor content and downregulation were not a result of a prolonged temporal interaction of ligand with receptor. Rather, the phenomena must be a consequence of the absolute concentrations of EGF interacting with receptor at the cell surface and/or in endosomes. The Rockefeller University Press 1989-12-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2115960/ /pubmed/2592403 Text en This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Articles
Ligand-mediated internalization, recycling, and downregulation of the epidermal growth factor receptor in vivo [published erratum appears in J Cell Biol 1990 Jan;110(1):following 227]
title Ligand-mediated internalization, recycling, and downregulation of the epidermal growth factor receptor in vivo [published erratum appears in J Cell Biol 1990 Jan;110(1):following 227]
title_full Ligand-mediated internalization, recycling, and downregulation of the epidermal growth factor receptor in vivo [published erratum appears in J Cell Biol 1990 Jan;110(1):following 227]
title_fullStr Ligand-mediated internalization, recycling, and downregulation of the epidermal growth factor receptor in vivo [published erratum appears in J Cell Biol 1990 Jan;110(1):following 227]
title_full_unstemmed Ligand-mediated internalization, recycling, and downregulation of the epidermal growth factor receptor in vivo [published erratum appears in J Cell Biol 1990 Jan;110(1):following 227]
title_short Ligand-mediated internalization, recycling, and downregulation of the epidermal growth factor receptor in vivo [published erratum appears in J Cell Biol 1990 Jan;110(1):following 227]
title_sort ligand-mediated internalization, recycling, and downregulation of the epidermal growth factor receptor in vivo [published erratum appears in j cell biol 1990 jan;110(1):following 227]
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2115960/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2592403