Lemansky P, Brix K, Herzog V
Institut für Zellbiologie, Ulrich-Haberland-Strasse 61a, Bonn, 53121, Germany.
Exp Cell Res. 1999 Aug 25;251(1):147-55. doi: 10.1006/excr.1999.4555.
A prominent secretory glycoprotein was detected in the culture medium of porcine thyrocytes which was identified as clusterin by microsequencing. Treatment of thyrocytes with thyroid stimulating hormone revealed a tight regulation of both synthesis and secretion of clusterin, with a distinct fraction of clusterin being always associated with the cells. At least three N-bound glycans were found on each subunit of clusterin, receiving most of the incorporated [(32)P]phosphate-label. Binding of clusterin to the immobilized cation-independent mannose 6-phosphate (M6P) receptor indicated that part of the phosphate label was contained in M6P moieties. Immunolabeling of cultured thyrocytes and of thyrocytes in situ showed clusterin on the apical cell surfaces where it colocalized with gp330/megalin, which is known to serve as a binding site for clusterin. The association with the apical plasma membrane, which, in thyrocytes, carries the iodinating system, was confirmed by biosynthetic iodination, an as yet unknown posttranslational modification of clusterin. On the basolateral plasma membranes clusterin was found within distinct, bipartite patches, suggesting that it is a constituent of cell-adhesion complexes and that it participates in cell-cell and cell-matrix interactions.