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Vol. 8, Issue 10, 1911-1931, October 1997
Department of Cellular and Structural Biology, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Denver, Colorado 80262
Submitted April 9, 1997; Accepted July 28, 1997| |
ABSTRACT |
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To characterize endogenous molecules and activities of the Golgi complex, proteins in transit were >99% cleared from rat hepatocytes by using cycloheximide (CHX) treatment. The loss of proteins in transit resulted in condensation of the Golgi cisternae and stacks. Isolation of a stacked Golgi fraction is equally efficient with or without proteins in transit [control (CTL SGF1) and cycloheximide (CHX SGF1)]. Electron microscopy and morphometric analysis showed that >90% of the elements could be positively identified as Golgi stacks or cisternae. Biochemical analysis showed that the cis-, medial-, trans-, and TGN Golgi markers were enriched over the postnuclear supernatant 200- to 400-fold with and 400- to 700-fold without proteins in transit. To provide information on a mechanism for import of calcium required at the later stages of the secretory pathway, calcium uptake into CTL SGF1 and CHX SGF1 was examined. All calcium uptake into CTL SGF1 was dependent on a thapsigargin-resistant pump not resident to the Golgi complex and a thapsigargin-sensitive pump resident to the Golgi. Experiments using CHX SGF1 showed that the thapsigargin-resistant activity was a plasma membrane calcium ATPase isoform in transit to the plasma membrane and the thapsigargin-sensitive pump was a sarcoplasmic/endoplasmic reticulum calcium ATPase isoform. In vivo both of these calcium ATPases function to maintain millimolar levels of calcium within the Golgi lumen.
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INTRODUCTION |
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A major focus of cell biology has been to understand the
structure-function relationships of the Golgi complex. The
characterization of the Golgi ribbon without transiting proteins will
allow study of its backbone structure and its functions. Cycloheximide
(CHX)1 treatment, which blocks protein
synthesis, has been shown to clear albumin from the Golgi
complex in rat liver (Taylor et al., 1984
) and it was
assumed this treatment would clear other proteins in transit through
the Golgi complex. We initiated this project in studying the Golgi
cleared of proteins in transit with the following long-range
objectives: to characterize the basic structure of the Golgi ribbon and
to obtain a Golgi fraction where in vivo structure remained relatively
intact in order to identify endogenous Golgi proteins and activities.
This latter objective led us to revise the Golgi fractionation
procedure we had been using for our functional assays of vesicle
budding from the trans-Golgi network (TGN; Salamero et
al., 1990
; Jones et al., 1993
). The modified procedure
provides highly enriched intact stacked Golgi fractions with and
without proteins in transit.
Many different procedures for isolation of Golgi fractions have been
described and in general result in two different types of fractions. In
one, the cells are homogenized so that the Golgi complex is essentially
"microsomalized," i.e., sheared into small vesicles (Fleischer
et al., 1969
; Ehrenreich et al., 1973
; Bergeron, 1979
). The second approach is to keep the Golgi relatively intact, a
procedure that requires much milder homogenization conditions (Morré and Mollenhauer, 1964
; Leelavathi et al., 1970
;
Hino et al., 1978
; Slusarewicz et al., 1994
). Rat
liver has been the preferred tissue for Golgi fractionation because of
the reduced amount of cytoskeleton in hepatocytes and minimal amount of
extracellular matrix (connective tissue) that together allow the
release of the Golgi stacks with mild homogenization conditions (Howell
et al., 1989
).
We had been using the Leelavathi et al. (1970)
procedure,
which yields an intact stack containing cis-, medial-, and
trans-cisternae including the TGN (Salamero et
al., 1990
; Jones et al., 1993
). Major disadvantages of
this fraction are that Golgi stacks are never entirely separated from
cytosol and that this fraction contains all the proteins in transit
through the Golgi complex. Any of the washing procedures used to
release soluble luminal or peripheral proteins (i.e., high pH or high
salt) result in fragmentation of the stacked structure. This article
presents a characterization of the Golgi complex cleared of proteins in
transit in vivo and in isolated stacked Golgi fractions. Clearance of
proteins in transit in no way alters the ability to isolate an enriched
or stacked fraction at high yield, thus providing an optimal
preparation for characterization of endogenous proteins and activities.
Our studies of endogenous Golgi activities have focused on the
identification of Golgi ion pumps as a first step in understanding how
the Golgi luminal ionic environment influences the sorting and
concentration functions taking place within the Golgi complex.
The ionic composition of the Golgi lumen and its regulation remains
poorly defined. Even though the luminal ionic environment of the Golgi
complex is hypothesized to play important roles in concentration and
processing of proteins in transit through this organelle. Multiple
studies have inferred a specific role for calcium in both condensation
and processing. Regulated secretory products (e.g., the secretogranins)
have been shown in vitro to require millimolar levels of calcium and
low pH to achieve the level of concentration present in the granules
(Chanat and Huttner, 1991
). Consistent with this function, many
secretory granules contain calcium chelated with secretory proteins
(e.g., in adrenal secretory granules and synaptic vesicles).
Proteolytic processing of proinsulin to insulin, which occurs in late
Golgi or secretory granules, when studied in vitro also requires
millimolar calcium and low pH (Davidson et al., 1988
). Other
proteolytic processing events require high levels of free calcium, for
example, processing of proopiomelanocortin studied in vivo in
permeablized AtT-20 cells (Schmidt and Moore, 1995
). The presence of
millimolar levels of calcium in the Golgi lumen has been reported from
studies using ion microscopy (Chandra et al., 1991
). These
levels are comparable to those estimated to exist within the
endoplasmic reticulum (ER) lumen. Where and when calcium enter the
lumen of the Golgi is not clear. Is all the calcium pumped into the
lumen of the ER and transported to the Golgi with molecules in transit?
Or does the Golgi contain its own calcium transport machinery?
The ER lumen is the major store of intracellular calcium in all cell
types and the regulation of calcium uptake, storage, and release into
the ER has been studied in detail. This process is mediated by
calcium-transporting ATPases of the sarcoplasmic/ER calcium ATPase
(SERCA) family of p-type pumps (Vegh et al., 1968
; Fiehn and
Hasselbach, 1970
; Knowles and Racker, 1975
; Lanini et al.,
1992
; Lytton et al., 1992
). Three genes that are
alternatively spliced give rise to five SERCA isoforms (SERCA 1a, 1b,
2a, 2b, and 3; reviewed in Wu et al., 1995
). All known
isoforms of this family of intracellular calcium pumps are equally
sensitive to the pharmacologic inhibitor thapsigargin (Lytton et
al., 1991
). The mechanism of regulated calcium release from the ER
lumen, particularly in the context of signal transduction pathways, has been studied extensively (Spat et al., 1986
; Hokin et
al., 1987
; Gill et al., 1989
; Koch, 1990
). Stimulation
of some signal transduction pathways leads to the formation of
inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3), which in turn binds an ER
transmembrane receptor/channel (the IP3 receptor). Binding of IP3 gates
the channel and allows calcium release to the cytosol.
The plasma membrane (PM) also contains a family of p-type
calcium-transporting ATPases related to the SERCAs, the PM calcium ATPases (PMCAs). The PMCA family is transcribed from four genes that
are alternatively spliced and give rise to 20 transcripts having a
variety of tissue distributions (reviewed in Carafoli, 1994
). In
contrast to the SERCAs, the PMCAs are not sensitive to thapsigargin.
All p-type pumps use an aspartyl phosphate enzyme intermediate step in
their reaction cycles (Pedersen and Carafoli, 1987
). This reaction
mechanism can be exploited in two ways: 1) preincubation of the enzyme
with sodium vanadate inhibits all p-type ATPases and 2) forming the
intermediate in the presence of radiolabeled [
-32P]ATP
on ice traps the aspartyl phosphate intermediate and allows its
detection.
A third form of p-type calcium ATPase has been identified in
Saccharomyces cerevisiae (Antebi and Fink, 1992
). This
calcium ATPase is encoded by the PMR1 gene and is about 50% identical to the SERCAs. SERCAs have not been identified in yeast and
comparisons of the biochemical properties of the PMR1 gene product and
the SERCAs have not been published. The PMR1 gene product has been localized to the yeast Golgi complex and found to have a variety of
functions within the cell (Antebi and Fink, 1992
; Lapinskas et
al., 1995
; Verostek and Trimble, 1995
; Halachmi and Eilam, 1996
;
Hartley et al., 1996
). In searching for novel SERCAs, a clone (encoding 919 amino acids) was identified from a rat stomach cDNA
library that, after sequencing, was found to have identities of 50% to
PMR1, 33% to SERCAs, and 23% to the PMCAs (Gunteski-Hamblin et
al., 1992
). The mammalian homologue is present in liver by Northern blot analysis. It is a calcium ATPase based on sequence analysis, but this has not been confirmed by enzymatic assay. The
intracellular localization and functions of the PMR1 homologue have not
been defined.
In addition to the functional studies mentioned above, the presence of
a calcium ATPase in the Golgi has been implied from demonstration of
ATP-dependent calcium uptake into isolated Golgi fractions (Baumrucker
et al., 1975
; Hodson, 1978
; Neville et al., 1981
;
West, 1981
; Virk et al., 1985
). These reports used Golgi fractions from lactating mammary glands and rat liver. The consensus from these studies was that the Golgi complex contained a calcium ATPase that was different from the PMCA and SERCA families based on the
argument that the fractions were enriched for a Golgi marker, galactosyltransferase activity, from 14-fold (Neville et
al., 1981
) to 52-fold (Hodson, 1978
) and the ATP-dependent calcium uptake could not be accounted for by contaminating ER or PM. These experiments are difficult to evaluate because the authors did not take
into account the PMCAs moving through the Golgi complex en
route to the PM and the experiments were carried out before the use of
thapsigargin to specifically inhibit the SERCA pumps.
Because the ability of the Golgi complex to transport calcium is
important to understanding numerous functions and studies with isolated
Golgi fractions are dependent on the enrichment and contamination of
the fraction, it was essential to characterize the uptake process
further. In mitochondria, calcium uptake is oligomycin sensitive. Two
groups (West, 1981
; Virk et al., 1985
) found that 26-40%
of the calcium uptake into their isolated Golgi fractions was due to an
oligomycin-insensitive proton gradient across the membranes that could
be dissipated by using a protonophore. The endosomal/lysosomal and the
trans-Golgi/TGN compartments (beside the mitochondria) have
a proton gradient across their membranes and could have contributed to
this activity but at the time these possibilities were not investigated
further.
The availability of well-characterized Golgi fractions, better characterized than those used in the past because of the increased number of markers available, led us to reinvestigate calcium uptake in the Golgi complex. The CHX Golgi fraction facilitated our evaluation of the contribution of PM proteins in transit. The control (CTL) and CHX stacked Golgi fractions (SGF1s) have allowed us to address a long-standing question of the mechanism for import of calcium required at the later stages of the secretory pathway.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Materials
All chemicals were obtained from Sigma (St. Louis, MO) or Boehringer Mannheim (Indianapolis, IN) unless otherwise indicated.
Fractionation
The initial steps in the fractionation procedure were based on
the method of Leelavathi et al. (1970)
. Rats were treated
with CHX (50 mg/kg) administered intraperitoneally 4 h before
sacrifice. At this dose, animals recover normal function within 24 h. Livers were removed from CTL and CHX-treated animals and placed in
precooled glass Petri dishes. All procedures are carried out on ice.
Livers were finely minced with scalpels and placed into a preweighed 50-ml conical tube and the wet weight was determined. The minced liver
was resuspended at 6 g/10 ml of 0.5 M phosphate-buffered sucrose
containing 100 mM
KH2PO4/K2HPO4, pH 6.8, 5 mM MgCl2, and 4 µg of the mixture of proteolytic
inhibitors (chymostatin, leupeptin, antipain, and pepstatin). All
sucrose solutions contained the same buffer and proteolytic inhibitors.
Homogenization was in a 50-ml conical tube. The probe of a Polytron
PT10/35 (Brinkmann, Westbury, NY), running at setting 3, was placed at
the top of the tube and slowly (within 30 s moved to the bottom
with a circular motion in only one pass). The homogenate was
centrifuged at low speed (1500 × g for 10 min) to
pellet unbroken cells, cell debris, and nuclei (nuclear pellet).
Because of the mild homogenization procedure the nuclear pellet
contained at least 50% of the cell protein. The resulting postnuclear
supernatant (PNS, 12 ml) was loaded in the middle of a sucrose step
gradient in an SW28 tube: steps of 1.3 M (5 ml) and 0.86 M (12 ml)
sucrose were overlaid with the PNS, followed by a 0.25 M layer (5 ml).
The gradient was centrifuged at 100,000 × g for 1 h with the brake off (Beckman Instruments, Palo Alto, CA; Figure
1). The following fractions were
collected from the top of the gradient by using a wide bore transfer
pipet: SI, the 0.25-0.5 M interface; A, the 0.5 M layer; SII, the
0.5-0.86 M interface; B, the 0.86 M layer; SIII, the 0.86-1.3 M
interface; C, the 1.3 M layer; and the pellet. After taking an aliquot
of the SII fraction, the fraction was adjusted to 1.15 M sucrose with 2 M sucrose. Density was determined by using a refractometer (Bausch and
Lomb, Boston, MA). The adjusted SII was loaded into the bottom of a
SW28 tube and overlaid with equal volumes (~10 ml) of 1.0, 0.86, and
0.25 M sucrose and centrifuged at 76,000 × g for
3 h. The following fractions were collected from the top of the
gradient: SGFA, the 0.25 M layer; SGF1; the 0.25-0.86 M interface;
SGFB, the 0.86 M layer; SGF2, the 0.86-1.0. M interface; SGFC, the 1.0 M layer; SGF3, the 1.0-1.15 M interface; SGFL, the 1.15 M layer (the
load zone). All of the fractions from each gradient were collected and
protein concentrations were determined by using the DC protein assay
(Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA). Small aliquots of these fractions were frozen
in liquid nitrogen and stored at
70°C.
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There are two important points in isolating and maintaining an intact Golgi fraction. First is the gentle homogenization procedure; the cells must be broken such that the Golgi "pops" out of the cell intact before ER microsomes are fully formed. Second is the mild handling; the fraction is never pelleted and resuspended or aggressively agitated. All methods of resuspension from a pellet will result in vesiculation of the fraction. Vesiculation also will occur if the fractions are removed from the gradient with a fine bore implement, such as a syringe needle, or are rapidly mixed, e.g., by vortex mixing.
Reporter Molecules
The antibodies used to characterize reporter molecules in the fractions are listed in Table 1 with their respective cellular compartment of predominant localization, reference, and source. We are indebted to many colleagues for generously providing these antibodies.
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Electron Microscopy
For in situ morphology, rats were anesthetized, perfused with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) to clear the circulatory system and then perfused for 10 min at 10 ml/min with 2% glutaraldehyde in 100 mM sodium cacodylate, pH 7.3, containing 2% sucrose. When the livers were blanched and firm, they were removed and small pieces were excised and diced into smaller blocks. The tissue was postfixed with 2% OsO4 in 0.8% potassium ferrocyanide buffered with 100 mM sodium cacodylate buffer, pH 7.3, containing 2% sucrose. The tissue blocks were washed with water, en bloc-stained with 2% aqueous uranyl acetate, dehydrated, and embedded in Spur's resin.
For in vitro morphology, aliquots of fractions were fixed in suspension
by addition of an equal volume of 4% glutaraldehyde in 200 mM sodium
cacodylate buffer, pH 7.3. After 2 h at 4°C, the fraction was
pelleted at 50,000 × g for 30 min in a TLA100 rotor
(Beckman). Pellets were washed twice in 100 mM sodium cacodylate buffer, pH 7.3, and postfixed with 2% OsO4 in 0.8%
potassium ferrocyanide before embedding in Spur's resin. Sections were
poststained with 5% uranyl acetate in methanol and Reynolds' lead
citrate (Reynolds, 1963
).
Morphometric Analysis
Systematic random sampling methods were used to examine
preparations of hepatocytes and SGF1 from three CTL animals and three CHX-treated animals (Weibel, 1969
; Lucocq, 1993
). For analysis of the
SGF1s, the entire pellets were sampled by photographing adjacent
consecutive fields from top to bottom. Each field was photographed at
15,000× and printed with a 2.8-fold enlargement. Twelve micrographs
were used to sample each SGF1 preparation. To determine the relative
number of cellular components, the micrograph was overlaid with a 2 cm × 2 cm grid and those structures lying at the intersections of
the grid were identified and counted. The micrographs were scored by
three individuals without knowledge of the treatment groups, and
subsequently, the scores were tallied. The total numbers of scored
structures for CTLs were 2692 and for CHX-treated were 3722.
Gel Electrophoresis and Immunoblots
One-dimensional SDS-PAGE was carried out using a 5-15%
polyacrylamide gradient and the buffer system of Maizel (1971)
.
Molecular weight standards were from Bio-Rad. For
immunoblots, samples were transferred to Immobilon-P
(Millipore, Bedford, MA) and were blocked for 1 h in 5% defatted
milk/PBS/0.02% sodium azide. The filters were incubated overnight with
primary antibody and washed. When using a mouse primary antibody, the
filters were incubated with rabbit anti-mouse IgG for 2 h. Bound
antibody was detected using 125I-labeled protein A (Dupont,
New England Nuclear, Boston, MA). When imunoblotting using antibodies
against PMCA (5F10) the procedure was varied, in that binding was
carried out in PBS/0.1% bovine serum albumin/0.02% sodium azide. The
positive control used for anti-PMCA immunoblots was COS
cell microsomes from cells over expressing the human PMCA4b isoform
(which were kindly provided by Dr. J. Penniston, Mayo Foundation,
Rochester, MN). Immunoblots and autophosphorylation
reactions were both quantitated by using a PhosphorImager (PI;
Molecular Dynamics, Sunnyvale, CA) and exposed to film for
autoradiography. All figures are from autoradiographs.
Enzymatic Assays
Enzymatic assays for
-N-acetylglucosaminidase,
lactate dehydrogenase, NADPH-cytochrome C reductase, succinate
dehydrogenase, and catalase were carried out as described by Beaufay
et al., (1974)
. Galactosyltransferase was assayed according
to Bretz and Stäubli (1977)
.
Method for Calculating Enrichments
For immunoblots, the protein load of each fraction was adjusted to observe a signal that could be reliably quantitated. This required very large protein loads for the PNS, intermediate loads for the fractions from the first gradient, and much lower loads for the fractions of the second gradient. The protein concentration loaded on the gels is noted on the respective lane in all figures. Enrichment was calculated relative to the PNS as (sample PI units/µg of protein)/(PNS PI units/µg of protein). No detectable antigen (NDA) is defined as an enrichment value of less than 0.5. Enrichment values are noted at the bottom of each lane in all panels. Yield was calculated as the (sample PI units/mg of protein)(total sample volume)(sample protein concentration in mg/ml)/(PNS PI units/mg of protein)(total PNS volume)(PNS protein concentration in mg/ml). Traditionally, enrichment is measured from the starting homogenate, but in the case of this fractionation procedure, the first homogenate contains large amounts of unbroken cells, cell debris, and nuclei making this type of analysis impractical. The amount of this fraction that one would need to load onto an SDS gel to obtain a reliable signal is beyond the resolving capacity of the gel system; therefore, we have calculated yields and enrichment from PNS.
Calcium Uptake Assays
Uptake assays were carried out at 37°C for 10 min. SGF1 (25 µg) or ER (220 µg) was suspended in 100 mM KCl, 30 mM choline chloride, 1 mM MgCl2, 1 mM sodium azide, 1 mM
dithiothreitol, 0.1 mM ethylene glycol-bis(
-aminoethyl
ether)-N,N,N
,N
-tetraacetic acid (EGTA), 25.5 µM CaCl2 (free Ca2+ = 75 nM), and 20 mM
HEPES, pH 7.0. Two percent of the calcium in each assay was
45Ca2+ (30 mCi/mg; Dupont, New England
Nuclear). Uptake was defined as pmoles of Ca2+ per min per
µg of protein that pelleted during centrifugation at 16,000 × g at 4°C for 22 min in a Brinkmann microcentrifuge. The
entire pellet was solubilized in 1% Triton X-100 for 45 min at 37°C
followed by addition of counting cocktail (Bio-Safe II, Research
Products International, Mount Prospect, IL) and measuring radioactivity
in a Beckman LS 1801 scintillation counter. Identical assays that had
no ATP added were used to define the background amount of
Ca2+ associated with the pelleted fraction, and that value
was subtracted from the total uptake value. Pharmacologic agents
(A23187, thapsigargin, and oligomycin; Calbiochem, San Diego, CA) were
first dissolved in dimethyl sulfoxide (thapsigargin) or in EtOH (A23187
and oligomycin) as stock solutions before addition to uptake assays.
Control assays contained equivalent amounts of dimethyl sulfoxide/EtOH
as were added to assays given the highest amount of a particular agent.
Time course experiments were performed by using a variant of the standard uptake reaction. Reactions were initiated by the addition of ATP (reactions were reduced by 50% for these assays) to buffer containing SGF1 or ER prewarmed to 25°C and uptake was allowed to occur for various lengths of time before being diluted into 1 ml of ice-cold reaction buffer, which did not contain radioactive calcium, and pelleted for 22 min at 4°C. These reactions were solubilized and radioactivity was measured as above.
Additional control experiments were performed to further define the assay system. Uptake reactions were performed for 10 min at 37°C and then kept on ice for 0, 10, or 20 min before pelleting for 22 min and measuring radioactivity. No loss of counts taken up was seen between the 0 and 20 min time points. In addition, uptake reactions were performed for 10 min at 37°C, the membranes were pelleted, and the supernatant was reused for another round of uptake for 10 min at 37°C. In these reactions fresh CTL-SGF1 also took up calcium, providing evidence that substrate was still available for further calcium uptake at the end of the standard 10-min incubations.
Autophosphorylation Reactions
Autophosphorylation reactions were performed according to Lytton
et al. (1992)
. SGF1 or ER were incubated on ice for 15 s in the presence of either zero free Ca2+ (1 mM EGTA) or
100 µM Ca2+. Reactions were stopped by diluting with a
20× volume of ice-cold 10% trichloroacetic acid and 1 mM
H3PO4. Precipitated proteins were solubilized
into sample buffer and separated on SDS-PAGE (pH 6.3) by the method of
Weber and Osborn (1969)
.
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RESULTS |
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CHX Treatment Clears Proteins in Transit from the Golgi Complex
Taylor et al. (1984)
showed that 90 min after a block
of protein synthesis with CHX, 90% of albumin, the major secretory
protein of hepatocytes, had cleared the Golgi complex. Because
secretory and transmembrane proteins in transit make up a large
proportion of the total protein component of Golgi fractions, even
after reduction of these molecules by 90%, they may still be dominant proteins of the fraction and obscure endogenous proteins (Howell and
Palade, 1982
). To obtain clearance values approaching 100%, we
increased the dose of CHX and the time between administration and
sacrifice of the animal. Our initial experiments showed the rate of
transport of various reporter molecules from synthesis to secretion or
insertion into the PM was significantly increased in the presence of
CHX. After ~4 h, secretory and transmembrane proteins in transit were
no longer detected in the CHX SGF1 (Figure 2).
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Four "marker" proteins were followed by immunoblot
analysis of PNS, SII, and SGF1 isolated from CTL and CHX-treated
animals. The first was the hepatocyte PM ectoATPase recognized by
monoclonal antibody HA4. The second was the polymeric IgA receptor
(pIgA-R), a transmembrane protein that follows the same route as
ectoATPase but is cleaved upon delivery to the apical PM. Its
ectoplasmic portion bound to pIgA (secretory IgA) is secreted into
bile. Studies of the kinetics of transport from synthesis to secretion
in bile for the pIgA-R have shown that in untreated rats the receptor was totally cleared from the hepatocyte by 90 min (Sztul et
al., 1983
, 1985
). Thus, the CHX treatment slows the rate of
transport of the pIgA-R and presumably other molecules moving to the
PM. The other reporter molecules were two soluble (luminal) secretory proteins, transferrin and apolipoprotein E (apoE). Transferrin was
selected because it was shown to have slower clearance from the ER than
other secretory proteins (Lodish et al., 1983
). ApoE was
selected to provide a biochemical correlate with the morphological evaluation of the fractions (the appearance of lipoprotein particles). ApoE is associated with very low density lipoprotein and high density
lipoprotein in transit through the secretory pathway of rat
hepatocytes. As seen in Figure 2, a 4-h CHX treatment efficiently cleared the Golgi of both secretory and transmembrane proteins in
transit. This time point was used for all subsequent studies.
Morphological Characterization
Structural Changes in the Golgi Ribbon In Situ after Proteins in
Transit Are Cleared.
The loss of proteins in transit resulted in
extensive structural changes of the Golgi complex that were evaluated
by ultrastructure analysis of CTL and CHX-treated hepatocytes (Figure
3). In regions of Golgi ribbons adjacent
to bile canaliculi from nonfasted CTL animals, the cisternae and
dilated rims and/or vesicles are distended with secretory product,
including lipoprotein particles (Figure 3, A and B). In contrast, the
compact regions of the Golgi ribbon from CHX-treated animals are
noticeably compressed and there is no evidence of dilated rims and/or
vesicles distended with secretory product (Figure 3, C and D). Small
vesicles (50-70 nm in diameter) and/or tubules are abundant adjacent
to the Golgi. The cisternae in the compact regions are not as linear as
in the control and frequently appear circular, as if they were no
longer connected with the tubules of the noncompact region. Unlike
mitotic Golgi fragments that distribute throughout the cytosol, the
Golgi depleted of proteins in transit by CHX treatment retains its
central localization and stacked structure (Novikoff et al.,
1971
; Lucocq and Warren, 1987
; Lucocq et al., 1989
). The
morphology of the hepatocytes from the CHX-treated animals appears
otherwise normal (our unpublished data).
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Structural Changes Observed In Situ Are Preserved in the Isolated Golgi Fractions. The major components of both CTL and CHX SGF1s are stacked and single cisternae (Figure 4). Some of the stacks retain adjacent tubular regions similar to the noncompact zones of the Golgi ribbon. In the CHX SGF1, the cisternae are more tightly packed within the stack (Figure 4, B, D, and E). The fenestrations of the cis-cisternae are readily apparent in the isolated fractions, particularly in the CHX SGF1 (Figure 4D). In the CTL SGF1, the cisternae have dilated rims and/or associated vesicles that are filled with lipoprotein particles (Figure 4, A and C). In CHX SGF1, there is no evidence of distention of the cisternae due to secretory products. Many of the compact regions of the CHX SGF1 appear to be circular (Figure 4B, arrowheads), similar to the morphologic changes observed in situ. Although vesicles are less abundant in the CHX SGF1, many clathrin-coated buds and vesicles are still present.
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Morphometric Analysis of CTL and CHX SGF1s. The components, integrity, and level of contamination of the CTL and CHX SGF1s were assessed by morphometric analysis (Table 2). The composition of CTL and CHX SGF1s was >90% identifiable Golgi stacks, intact cisternae, associated vesicles, or "blown-up" cisternae. The CHX SGF1 shows greater integrity of the compact region; ~44% of the Golgi elements of CHX SGF1 were stacked but only 32% of the elements were stacked in the CTL SGF1. In CTL SGF1, the cisternal width varied reflecting the presence of the secretory proteins, especially the lipoproteins, whereas the widths of the cisternae in CHX SGF1 were approximately equal. Further, the amount of vesicles in the CHX SGF1 was reduced compared with CTL SGF1; however, the proportion of those vesicles present that are clathrin-coated remained the same (~16%). The non-Golgi components scored in both fractions were lipid droplets, lysosomes, ER, and non-Golgi membranes and make up ~7% of both CTL and CHX SGF1s. In vivo, Golgi stacks had four or five cisternae, and CHX treatment did not result in a change of cisternal number but did result in a decrease in luminal width of all cisternae. The CHX treatment resulted in a decrease in luminal width of the cisternae by about 30% in the hepatocyte and 20% in the SGF1s (our unpublished results).
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Biochemical Characterization
Distribution of Golgi Markers in CTL and CHX SGF1s.
The
biochemical characterization provides parallel and complementary data
to the morphology on Golgi proteins and contaminants present in the CTL
and CHX SGF1s. The distribution of four Golgi markers was determined in
the PNS and fractions from both gradients in the SGF isolation protocol
by quantitative immunoblot and enzymatic assay (Figure
5 and Tables
3 and
4). Transmembrane proteins predominately
localized to cis-, medial-, trans-, and TGN were selected to determine whether all cisternal subcompartments of the
Golgi complex were equally isolated. The markers used were p28 for
cis- (Subramaniam et al., 1995
), MG160 for
medial- (Gonatas et al., 1989
), and galactosyltransferase
(Berger et al., 1981
) and TGN38 (Luzio et al.,
1990
) for trans- and TGN. Enrichment of each marker over its
concentration in the PNS was calculated for each fraction and that
value is noted below each lane (Figure 5 and Table 3). The Golgi
markers were enriched ~15- to 20-fold over PNS in the SII fraction
with no significant differences apparent between CTL and CHX SGF1s.
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Minimal Enrichment of ER Markers in CTL and CHX SGF1.
As our
goal is to examine the calcium uptake activity associated with the
Golgi complex, it is critical to evaluate the amount of ER markers in
the SGF1s. The ER contains a family of well-characterized calcium
pumps, the SERCAs, that transport calcium into the lumen of the ER. We
selected markers that are significantly enriched in the smooth
endoplasmic reticulum (SER), cytochrome P450 and NADPH-cytochrome
c reductase activity (Wrighton et al., 1985
); equally distributed in rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER) and SER, SERCA
and BiP, a soluble ER protein (Lytton and MacLennan, 1988
; Tooze
et al., 1989
); and an RER-specific transmembrane protein, ribophorin II (Hortsch et al., 1986
). The major distribution
of the ER markers was in the heavier SIII and C fractions on the first
gradient (Figure 6). However, ~5% of
each ER marker isolated in the SII fraction but remained in the load
zone of the second gradient. Nonetheless, there was always a detectable
amount of ER markers in the SGF1 fractions (Figure 6 and Tables 3 and
4). In CTL SGF1, the markers cytochrome P450, SERCA, BiP, NADPH
cytochrome c reductase, and ribophorin II showed minimal
enrichment and were at the same concentration as in the PNS. In the CHX
SGF1, the enrichment of the ER markers increased twofold. The
enrichment of ER markers in the SGF1s is several hundred fold smaller
than the enrichment for the Golgi markers, indicating that ER
contamination is minimal.
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Evaluation of Enrichment for Other Markers in CTL and CHX
SGF1s.
Because lysosomes were detected in the morphological
evaluation, the lysosomal enzyme,
-N-acetylglucosaminidase was assayed and found to be
present in the SGF1s at the same concentration as the PNS (about
onefold enrichment; Table 4). Markers of mitochondrial membrane
(succinate dehydrogenase) and peroxisomal content (catalase) showed
minimal enrichment in both CTL and CHX SGF1s (Table 4). The following
peripheral and coat proteins associated with the Golgi complex were
evaluated: p200, clathrin, and
-COP (Table 3). Each of these
molecules is enriched in CTL SGF1 (p200, 68-fold; clathrin, 23-fold;
-COP, 35-fold), and these enrichments are reduced by half in CHX
SGF1.
Yield of CTL and CHX SGF1s. The yields of the Golgi markers shown in Table 3 nicely parallel the enrichment data and in CTL and CHX SGF1 are, respectively: cis- p28, 51% and 46%; medial- MG160, 68% and 61%; trans- and TGN galactosyltransferase, 41% and 36%; and TGN38, 42% and 37%. The parallel protein yields per gram wet weight liver are 1.0 mg and 0.75 mg. Thus, the protocol provides isolation of fractions with intact structure and sufficient material to undertake most studies of Golgi function.
SGF1 Takes Up Calcium into a Membrane-Bound Compartment in an
ATP-dependent Manner and Is Blocked by Known Inhibitors of SERCA and
All p-Type ATPases.
Calcium uptake was first analyzed with the CTL
SGF1 and the CTL ER fraction. When incubated with ATP, both fractions
accumulated Ca2+ at 1 pmol per min per µg of protein
(Figure 7A). Uptake into a membrane-bound
compartment was confirmed by the addition of the calcium ionophore
A23187, which reduced the specific calcium uptake to the background
levels observed in the absence of ATP. The requirement for ATP
hydrolysis was established by performing the reaction on ice or in the
presence of 1 mM adenosine 5
-[
,
-imido]triphosphate (AMP-PNP),
a nonhydrolyzable analogue of ATP, conditions in which background
levels of calcium uptake were observed (our unpublished results).
|
|
Immunoblot Analysis Reveals the Presence of a PMCA in CTL SGF1 but Not in CHX SGF1 and Confirms a Comparable Enrichment of SERCA Protein in SGF1 and ER. The loss of the thapsigargin-resistant uptake activity from CHX SGF1 led us to hypothesize this activity was due to a PMCA isoform en route to the PM. To test this directly, we obtained monoclonal antibodies that recognize all PMCA isoforms (5F10) and used them to probe our SGF1 and CTL fractions. The 5F10 antibody recognized an ~140-kDa protein in the PNS from livers of CTL and CHX-treated rats, as well as a similar-sized protein in CTL SGF1 (Figure 9A). Importantly, no signal is detected in the CHX SGF1 fraction.
|
Properties of Calcium Uptake Are Different in SGF1 and ER.
Addition of oxalate anions to uptake assays enhances calcium uptake
into the ER by precipitating calcium in the form of calcium oxalate,
thereby decreasing leak out of the ER lumen (Moore et al.,
1975
). When uptake assays were carried out in the presence of 2.5 mM
potassium oxalate, the calcium uptake remained the same in CTL and CHX
SGF1s, but it increased 60% in the CTL and 40% in the CHX ER
fractions (Figure 10). These data
indicate that the membrane-bound compartment taking up calcium in the
SGF1s is fundamentally different from the membrane-bound compartment in
the ER fraction. This is not what would have happened if all the
calcium uptake in SGF1s was due to ER membrane contamination of the
Golgi fractions and correlates with the conclusions drawn from the
morphological and biochemical data demonstrating minimal contamination
of the Golgi fractions with ER.
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DISCUSSION |
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Reduction of the Golgi complex to it most basic components is a practical way to gain new insight into its functions. Herein we have established conditions for CHX treatment and demonstrate that these conditions effectively clear transmembrane and secretory proteins in transit from the Golgi complex. This reductionist approach has revealed basic properties inherent to the Golgi ribbon. First, the compact region of the ribbon is stable and lack of proteins in transit results in a reduction in diameter of all cisternae without changing their number. The noncompact regions appear less stable and seem to dissociate from the compact regions. Second, the compliment of cisternae remain the same and can be isolated with higher efficiency than the control. Third, proteins in transit account for approximately 50% of the protein in rat liver Golgi at steady state. Fourth, calcium transport into the lumen of the Golgi complex is mediated by two p-type calcium pumps. Finally, dissection of the proteins of the CHX-CHX SGF1 will lead to identification and understanding of the building blocks of this organelle.
The finding, that cis-, medial-, trans-, and TGN
components of the Golgi complex remain in approximately the same
proportions after CHX treatment has blocked entry of "new" proteins
from the ER suggests that the Golgi is a very stable structure and that endogenous molecules are not degraded or mislocalized. Proteins in
transit account for about 50% of the total protein of the Golgi fraction, based on the increase in enrichment of the CHX SGF1 over the
CTL SGF1. This is in reasonable agreement with the earlier estimate of
~40% obtained by protein assay after high pH washing a Golgi
fraction (Howell and Palade, 1982
). The difference in the two estimates
can be partially accounted for by transmembrane proteins in transit, as
high pH washing cannot remove this category of proteins from Golgi
membranes. High pH washing has the following three disadvantages in
preparing a Golgi fraction for identification of endogenous molecules:
1) transmembrane proteins in transit are not removed, 2) peripherally
associated proteins (both luminal and cytoplasmic) that have unique
Golgi functions are removed, and 3) enzymes may become inactivated. CHX
treatment avoids all of these problems and is, therefore, an ideal
method to use in the identification of the endogenous proteins of the
Golgi complex. We have resolved the SGF1s by high resolution
two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and the most abundant 173 Golgi
specific proteins have been placed into three categories: cargo,
cytosolic Golgi-associated, and resident Golgi proteins (Taylor
et al., 1997
). We are working toward identifying already
characterized proteins by using immunoblot analysis and
identifying unknown species.
The fractionation scheme reported herein is a significant improvement
over the 1970 protocol of Leelavathi et al. (1970)
; the
stacked Golgi cisternae are separated from cytosol and other contaminating membranes increasing the enrichment 10-fold, resulting in
a final enrichment of ~400-fold over PNS. In 1970 very few Golgi
markers had been identified, so our evaluation of enrichment and yields
of markers from the different subcompartments of the Golgi complex are
clearly more complete. The enrichment of biochemical markers for
cis-, medial-, and trans-Golgi in SGF1 isolated
from CTL and CHX-treated animals is 300- to 700-fold. This is
paralleled by an enrichment of morphologically defined Golgi stacks,
cisternae, and vesicles of >90%. Strikingly, the morphometric
analysis shows that the percent of vesicles observed immediately
adjacent to Golgi stacks is reduced by half in the CHX fraction (7%)
compared with CTL (13%). These data are consistent with the reduction
in the enrichment of the coat proteins clathrin and
-COP from 23- and 35-fold in CTL SGF1 to 12- and 20-fold in CHX SGF1. Secretory proteins in transit, transferrin and apoE, are enriched 50-fold in the
CTL SGF1 and could not be detected in CHX SGF1. These data demonstrate
that secretory proteins have cleared the Golgi. This is dramatically
corroborated by morphology. The cisternae of CTL SGF1 are wider and
filled with lipoprotein particles. This is especially evident at the
cisternal rims and what appear to be vesicles in the trans
region of the Golgi stack. After treatment with CHX, the cisternae are
condensed and have reduced cisternal width, and lipoprotein particles
are not evident within cisternae and vesicles surrounding the isolated
stacks. Although there is no morphological correlate of transmembrane
proteins in transit, the biochemical enrichment of HA4 and the pIgA-R
shows these PM proteins enriched 16- and 110-fold, respectively, in the
CTL SGF1, and both are effectively cleared from the CHX SGF1. A low
level of contamination of the SGF1s determined by morphometric
evaluation is borne out by the barely detectable levels of lysosomal
and ER markers and their minimal enrichments in SGF1.
One noticeable difference in the Golgi marker enrichment data for both CTL and CHX fractions is that MG160, the medial marker, was found to enrich 150% more than p28 (cis) and TGN38 (trans). We attribute this difference to a greater stability and hence better recovery of the medial cisternae during the fractionation. The cis and trans cisternae are more susceptible to shear in the homogenization and fractionation procedures. However, both the cis and trans markers are recovered at similar levels. This level of enrichment and yields for p28 (204- and 400-fold enrichment and 51% and 46% yields for CTL and CHX SGF1s, respectively) and TGN38 (233- and 376-fold enrichment and 42% and 37% yields for CTL and CHX SGF1s, respectively) are certainly sufficient for studies of Golgi function.
One might wonder why we have spent our time and resources to develop a fractionation procedure using rat liver rather than using cultured cells. To address this concern, we have modified this fractionation protocol to obtain a stacked Golgi fraction from normal rat kidney (NRK) cells. The fractions obtained contained fewer stacked Golgi cisternae, greater contamination and the yield was extremely low, 50 µg of protein/3 × 107 cells (our unpublished results). Furthermore, studies of function would not be time and cost effective nor would it be practical to use such fractions to define endogenous proteins.
The clearing of proteins in transit by CHX treatment has revealed many properties of the organelle and allowed isolation of a stacked Golgi fraction enriched in endogenous proteins. Our characterization of calcium uptake indicates that these fractions are suitable for the study of endogenous Golgi proteins and functions. Two different calcium uptake activities are characterized in the CTL SGF1. The first activity, accounting for ~50% of the total, is consistent with a PMCA isoform(s). It is thapsigargin resistant, vanadate sensitive, oligomycin resistant and is cleared from the Golgi fraction after CHX treatment of the animals. A signal for PMCA was detected in CTL SGF1 but was not detected in the CHX SGF1 by immunoblot analysis. These data provide convincing evidence that the thapsigargin-resistant activity is not a resident Golgi activity and is most likely due to the PMCA isoform(s) in transit. Thus molecules in transit can function en route and contribute significantly to total calcium transport within the Golgi complex.
The other calcium uptake activity in the SGF1s corresponds to a SERCA
class of intracellular calcium pumps. This activity is thapsigargin and
vanadate sensitive, oligomycin resistant, and could not be
distinguished from the ER calcium pump activity, in all experiments
performed. The thapsigargin dose-response curve and IC50
values were the same for SGF1 and ER fractions in the presence of low
and high free calcium levels. Immunoblots of the fractions,
with an antibody that recognizes all isoforms of SERCA, revealed the
same 110-kDa band in both the ER and SGF1s with enrichment levels of
one- to fivefold. Upon further examination using autophosphorylation experiments, the only autophosphorylated band in the SGF1s that was
EGTA sensitive and calcium stimulated was of the same molecular weight
as the SERCA pump of the ER (110 kDa). The autophosphorylation was also
thapsigargin sensitive. Wu et al. (1995)
suggest that SERCA2b is the only isoform expressed in liver and it is reasonable to
expect this autophosphorylated band to correspond to a SERCA2b isoform.
These data argue that there is no biochemically unique resident calcium
ATPase in the rat liver Golgi fractions. On the other hand, there is
both SERCA protein and activity associated with the Golgi complex. Any
Golgi-specific activity would be expected to enrich to the same level
as the well characterized resident Golgi transmembrane proteins (200- to 400-fold). The much lower enrichment for SERCA results from it being
distributed in two compartments, ER and Golgi. Because in rat liver
hepatocytes, the ER is a large compartment containing approximately
50% of total cellular membranes, and the Golgi is a much smaller
compartment, containing approximately 7% of total cellular membrane, a
much lower level of enrichment for a protein equally distributed in both membranes is expected (Weibel et al., 1969
).
Data to suggest that the SERCA activity is actually in the Golgi and not a result of ER contamination come from two different experimental approaches. First is the morphometic and biochemical characterization of the fractions presented here. The ER contamination was at the level of 1%. Because both fractions had approximately the same uptake activity (pmoles of calcium per minute per microgram of protein), this would translate into the contaminating ER in the SGF1 transporting calcium at 100 times the rate it transports it in the ER fraction. Second is the data that in the presence of oxalate, calcium uptake was enhanced 40% in CTL and 60% in CHX ER. However, SGF1 calcium uptake showed no oxalate enhancement. This means that the membranes in the SGF1s containing the calcium uptake activity do not transport oxalate into the lumen of the Golgi fractions but the ER fractions have oxalate transporting activities.
What about the mammalian homologue of the yeast PMR1? Because PMR1 is localized to the Golgi, perhaps the mammalian homologue is as well. Too little is known at the present to draw reasonable conclusions and appropriate reagents are not avaliable to test its presence in rat liver fractions. If the PMR1 homologue is present in the Golgi fractions, it must be biochemically indistinguishable from the SERCAs.
We conclude that the Golgi complex does not contain a unique resident calcium transporting ATPase and that all calcium uptake into SGF1 can be attributed to two calcium uptake mechanisms: first, via a thapsigargin-resistant p-type pump that is not resident to the