Isoproterenol increases sorting of parotid gland cargo proteins to the basolateral pathway

Srirangapatnam G. Venkatesh, Jinlian Tan, Sven Ulrik Gorr, Douglas S. Darling

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

11 Scopus citations

Abstract

Exocrine cells have an essential function of sorting secreted proteins into the correct secretory pathway. A clear understanding of sorting in salivary glands would contribute to the correct targeting of therapeutic transgenes. The present work investigated whether there is a change in the relative proportions of basic proline-rich protein (PRP) and acidic PRPs in secretory granules in response to chronic isoproterenol treatment, and whether this alters the sorting of endogenous cargo proteins. Immunoblot analysis of secretory granules from rat parotids found a large increase of basic PRP over acidic PRPs in response to chronic isoproterenol treatment. Pulse chase experiments demonstrated that isoproterenol also decreased regulated secretion of newly synthesized secretory proteins, including PRPs, amylase and parotid secretory protein. This decreased efficiency of the apical regulated pathway may be mediated by alkalization of the secretory granules since it was reversed by treatment with mild acid. We also investigated changes in secretion through the basolateral (endocrine) pathways. A significant increase in parotid secretory protein and salivary amylase was detected in sera of isoproterenol-treated animals, suggesting increased routing of the regulated secretory proteins to the basolateral pathway. These studies demonstrate that shifts of endogenous proteins can modulate regulated secretion and sorting of cargo proteins.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)C558-C565
JournalAmerican Journal of Physiology - Cell Physiology
Volume293
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 2007

Keywords

  • Amylase
  • Parotid secretory protein
  • Polarized secretion

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