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Subcellular localization of mannose 6-phosphate glycoproteins in rat brain

Authors :
David E. Sleat
Peter Lobel
Li Lin
Istvan Sohar
Robert Wattiaux
Ming Sing Hsu
Franz Dubois
Michel Jadot
John E. Pintar
Simone Wattiaux-De Coninck
Source :
The Journal of Biological Chemistry. 274(30):21104-21113
Publication Year :
1999
Publisher :
American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Inc., 1999.

Abstract

The intracellular transport of soluble lysosomal enzymes relies on the post-translational modification of N-linked oligosaccharides to generate mannose 6-phosphate (Man 6-P) residues. In most cell types the Man 6-P signal is rapidly removed after targeting of the precursor proteins from the Golgi to lysosomes via interactions with Man 6-phosphate receptors. However, in brain, the steady state proportion of lysosomal enzymes containing Man 6-P is considerably higher than in other tissues. As a first step toward understanding the mechanism and biological significance of this observation, we analyzed the subcellular localization of the rat brain Man 6-P glycoproteins by combining biochemical and morphological approaches. The brain Man 6-P glycoproteins are predominantly localized in neuronal lysosomes with no evidence for a steady state localization in nonlysosoreal or prelysosomal compartments. This contrasts with the clear endosome-like localization of the low steady state proportion of mannose-6-phosphorylated lysosomal enzymes in liver. It therefore seems likely that the observed high percentage of phosphorylated species in brain is a consequence of the accumulation of lysosomal enzymes in a neuronal lysosome that does not fully dephosphorylate the Man 6-P moieties.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1083351X and 00219258
Volume :
274
Issue :
30
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Biological Chemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e3b289b63a3294a935f62628e57af096