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(Glyco)sphingolipids Are Sorted in Sub-Apical Compartments in HepG2 Cells: A Role for Non-Golgi–Related Intracellular Sites in the Polarized Distribution of (Glyco)sphingolipids

In polarized HepG2 cells, the fluorescent sphingolipid analogues of glucosylceramide (C(6)-NBD-GlcCer) and sphingomyelin (C(6)-NBD-SM) display a preferential localization at the apical and basolateral domain, respectively, which is expressed during apical to basolateral transcytosis of the lipids (v...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: van IJzendoorn, Sven C.D., Hoekstra, Dick
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1998
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2148170/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9700158
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author van IJzendoorn, Sven C.D.
Hoekstra, Dick
author_facet van IJzendoorn, Sven C.D.
Hoekstra, Dick
author_sort van IJzendoorn, Sven C.D.
collection PubMed
description In polarized HepG2 cells, the fluorescent sphingolipid analogues of glucosylceramide (C(6)-NBD-GlcCer) and sphingomyelin (C(6)-NBD-SM) display a preferential localization at the apical and basolateral domain, respectively, which is expressed during apical to basolateral transcytosis of the lipids (van IJzendoorn, S.C.D., M.M.P. Zegers, J.W. Kok, and D. Hoekstra. 1997. J. Cell Biol. 137:347–457). In the present study we have identified a non-Golgi–related, sub-apical compartment (SAC), in which sorting of the lipids occurs. Thus, in the apical to basolateral transcytotic pathway both C(6)-NBD-GlcCer and C(6)-NBD-SM accumulate in SAC at 18°C. At this temperature, transcytosing IgA also accumulates, and colocalizes with the lipids. Upon rewarming the cells to 37°C, the lipids are transported from the SAC to their preferred membrane domain. Kinetic evidence is presented that shows in a direct manner that after leaving SAC, sphingomyelin disappears from the apical region of the cell, whereas GlcCer is transferred to the apical, bile canalicular membrane. The sorting event is very specific, as the GlcCer epimer C(6)-NBD-galactosylceramide, like C(6)-NBD-SM, is sorted in the SAC and directed to the basolateral surface. It is demonstrated that transport of the lipids to and from SAC is accomplished by a vesicular mechanism, and is in part microtubule dependent. Furthermore, the SAC in HepG2 bear analogy to the apical recycling compartments, previously described in MDCK cells. However, in contrast to the latter, the structural integrity of SAC does not depend on an intact microtubule system. Taken together, we have identified a non-Golgi–related compartment, acting as a “traffic center” in apical to basolateral trafficking and vice versa, and directing the polarized distribution of sphingolipids in hepatic cells.
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spelling pubmed-21481702008-05-01 (Glyco)sphingolipids Are Sorted in Sub-Apical Compartments in HepG2 Cells: A Role for Non-Golgi–Related Intracellular Sites in the Polarized Distribution of (Glyco)sphingolipids van IJzendoorn, Sven C.D. Hoekstra, Dick J Cell Biol Regular Articles In polarized HepG2 cells, the fluorescent sphingolipid analogues of glucosylceramide (C(6)-NBD-GlcCer) and sphingomyelin (C(6)-NBD-SM) display a preferential localization at the apical and basolateral domain, respectively, which is expressed during apical to basolateral transcytosis of the lipids (van IJzendoorn, S.C.D., M.M.P. Zegers, J.W. Kok, and D. Hoekstra. 1997. J. Cell Biol. 137:347–457). In the present study we have identified a non-Golgi–related, sub-apical compartment (SAC), in which sorting of the lipids occurs. Thus, in the apical to basolateral transcytotic pathway both C(6)-NBD-GlcCer and C(6)-NBD-SM accumulate in SAC at 18°C. At this temperature, transcytosing IgA also accumulates, and colocalizes with the lipids. Upon rewarming the cells to 37°C, the lipids are transported from the SAC to their preferred membrane domain. Kinetic evidence is presented that shows in a direct manner that after leaving SAC, sphingomyelin disappears from the apical region of the cell, whereas GlcCer is transferred to the apical, bile canalicular membrane. The sorting event is very specific, as the GlcCer epimer C(6)-NBD-galactosylceramide, like C(6)-NBD-SM, is sorted in the SAC and directed to the basolateral surface. It is demonstrated that transport of the lipids to and from SAC is accomplished by a vesicular mechanism, and is in part microtubule dependent. Furthermore, the SAC in HepG2 bear analogy to the apical recycling compartments, previously described in MDCK cells. However, in contrast to the latter, the structural integrity of SAC does not depend on an intact microtubule system. Taken together, we have identified a non-Golgi–related compartment, acting as a “traffic center” in apical to basolateral trafficking and vice versa, and directing the polarized distribution of sphingolipids in hepatic cells. The Rockefeller University Press 1998-08-10 /pmc/articles/PMC2148170/ /pubmed/9700158 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 Regular Articles
van IJzendoorn, Sven C.D.
Hoekstra, Dick
(Glyco)sphingolipids Are Sorted in Sub-Apical Compartments in HepG2 Cells: A Role for Non-Golgi–Related Intracellular Sites in the Polarized Distribution of (Glyco)sphingolipids
title (Glyco)sphingolipids Are Sorted in Sub-Apical Compartments in HepG2 Cells: A Role for Non-Golgi–Related Intracellular Sites in the Polarized Distribution of (Glyco)sphingolipids
title_full (Glyco)sphingolipids Are Sorted in Sub-Apical Compartments in HepG2 Cells: A Role for Non-Golgi–Related Intracellular Sites in the Polarized Distribution of (Glyco)sphingolipids
title_fullStr (Glyco)sphingolipids Are Sorted in Sub-Apical Compartments in HepG2 Cells: A Role for Non-Golgi–Related Intracellular Sites in the Polarized Distribution of (Glyco)sphingolipids
title_full_unstemmed (Glyco)sphingolipids Are Sorted in Sub-Apical Compartments in HepG2 Cells: A Role for Non-Golgi–Related Intracellular Sites in the Polarized Distribution of (Glyco)sphingolipids
title_short (Glyco)sphingolipids Are Sorted in Sub-Apical Compartments in HepG2 Cells: A Role for Non-Golgi–Related Intracellular Sites in the Polarized Distribution of (Glyco)sphingolipids
title_sort (glyco)sphingolipids are sorted in sub-apical compartments in hepg2 cells: a role for non-golgi–related intracellular sites in the polarized distribution of (glyco)sphingolipids
topic Regular Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2148170/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9700158
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