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1.
Plant Cell ; 17(1): 132-48, 2005 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15632053

ABSTRACT

We have characterized the requirements to inhibit the function of the plant vacuolar sorting receptor BP80 in vivo and gained insight into the crucial role of receptor recycling between the prevacuolar compartment and the Golgi apparatus. The drug wortmannin interferes with the BP80-mediated route to the vacuole and induces hypersecretion of a soluble BP80-ligand. Wortmannin does not prevent receptor-ligand binding itself but causes BP80 levels to be limiting. Consequently, overexpression of BP80 partially restores vacuolar cargo transport. To simulate receptor traffic, we tested a truncated BP80 derivative in which the entire lumenal domain of BP80 has been replaced by the green fluorescent protein (GFP). The resulting chimeric protein (GFP-BP80) accumulates in the prevacuolar compartment as expected, but a soluble GFP fragment can also be detected in purified vacuoles. Interestingly, GFP-BP80 coexpression interferes with the correct sorting of a BP80-ligand and causes hypersecretion that is reversible by expressing a 10-fold excess of full-length BP80. This suggests that GFP-BP80 competes with endogenous BP80 mainly at the retrograde transport route that rescues receptors from the prevacuolar compartment. Treatment with wortmannin causes further leakage of GFP-BP80 from the prevacuolar compartment to the vacuoles, whereas BP80-ligands are secreted. We propose that recycling of the vacuolar sorting receptor from the prevacuolar compartment to the Golgi apparatus is an essential process that is saturable and wortmannin sensitive.


Subject(s)
Golgi Apparatus/metabolism , Intracellular Membranes/metabolism , Nicotiana/metabolism , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Receptors, Cell Surface/metabolism , Vacuoles/metabolism , Carrier Proteins/drug effects , Carrier Proteins/metabolism , Cell Compartmentation/drug effects , Cell Compartmentation/physiology , Enzyme Inhibitors/pharmacology , Golgi Apparatus/ultrastructure , Green Fluorescent Proteins , Intracellular Membranes/ultrastructure , Protein Transport/drug effects , Protein Transport/physiology , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/metabolism , Nicotiana/ultrastructure , Vacuoles/ultrastructure
2.
Mol Biol Cell ; 14(6): 2592-602, 2003 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12808054

ABSTRACT

We have assessed the ability of the plant secretory pathway to handle the expression of complex heterologous proteins by investigating the fate of a hybrid immunoglobulin A/G in tobacco cells. Although plant cells can express large amounts of the antibody, a relevant proportion is normally lost to vacuolar sorting and degradation. Here we show that the synthesis of high amounts of IgA/G does not impose stress on the plant secretory pathway. Plant cells can assemble antibody chains with high efficiency and vacuolar transport occurs only after the assembled immunoglobulins have traveled through the Golgi complex. We prove that vacuolar delivery of IgA/G depends on the presence of a cryptic sorting signal in the tailpiece of the IgA/G heavy chain. We also show that unassembled light chains are efficiently secreted as monomers by the plant secretory pathway.


Subject(s)
Golgi Apparatus/metabolism , Immunoglobulin Heavy Chains/metabolism , Protein Sorting Signals/physiology , Vacuoles/metabolism , Animals , Humans , Immunoglobulin Heavy Chains/genetics , Immunoglobulin Light Chains/metabolism , Protein Sorting Signals/genetics , Protoplasts/metabolism , Nicotiana/metabolism , Transfection
3.
Eur J Biochem ; 269(24): 6042-51, 2002 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12473100

ABSTRACT

In this study, we demonstrate that the folding and assembly of IgG in transgenic tobacco plants is orchestrated by BiP (binding protein), an endoplasmic reticulum resident chaperone. Expression of BiP and calreticulin was examined in transgenic tobacco plants that express immunoglobulin chains, either singly or in combination to form IgG antibody. BiP mRNA expression was lowest in wild-type nontransformed plants and those that expressed immunoglobulin light chain alone. Higher mRNA levels were detected in plants expressing fully assembled immunoglobulin (light and heavy chains), and the most abundant levels of RNA transcript were found in those plants that expressed immunoglobulin heavy chain alone. Estimation of total BiP demonstrated a similar pattern, with the highest levels detected in plants expressing immunoglobulin heavy chain alone. Immunoprecipitation studies demonstrated that BiP was associated with immunoglobulin chains extracted from protoplast lysates, but not from secreted fluids. Again, most BiP was coprecipitated from plants expressing heavy chain only and those that produced full length IgG. The binding of BiP to Ig heavy chains was ATP-sensitive. Co-expression of heavy and light chain resulted in IgG assembly and displacement of BiP from the heavy chain as the amount of light chain increased. Although calreticulin mRNA and total protein levels varied in a similar manner to those of BiP in the transgenic plants, there was no evidence for association between calreticulin and Ig chains, by coimmunoprecipitation. The results indicate that BiP, but not calreticulin, takes part in immunoglobulin folding and assembly in transgenic plants.


Subject(s)
Endoplasmic Reticulum/metabolism , Nicotiana/genetics , Plants, Genetically Modified , Blotting, Northern , Blotting, Western , Calreticulin/metabolism , Carrier Proteins/metabolism , Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel , Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay , Immunoglobulin G/metabolism , Molecular Chaperones/metabolism , Plasmids/metabolism , Precipitin Tests , Protein Binding , RNA/metabolism , RNA, Messenger/metabolism , Transfection
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