Lombardi P, Mulder M, de Wit E, van Berkel T J, Frants R R, Havekes L M
IVVO-TNO, Gaubius Laboratory, Leiden, The Netherlands.
Biochem J. 1993 Mar 1;290 ( Pt 2)(Pt 2):509-14. doi: 10.1042/bj2900509.
In previous studies we have shown that in HepG2 cells, as compared with fibroblasts, the low-density lipoprotein (LDL) receptor is only weakly down-regulated upon incubation of the cells with LDL. To explain this difference in down-regulation of the LDL-receptor activity, we studied simultaneously the intracellular processing of 125I-labelled LDL in both cell lines. Upon incubation of HepG2 cells with 125I-LDL, the appearance of degradation products started at 90 min, whereas in fibroblasts this lag time was only 30 min. The degradation efficiency (representing the ratio degradation/cell association of LDL) in HepG2 was less than 50% of that in fibroblasts up to 5h of incubation at 37 degrees C. The longer lag time and low efficiency of the degradation of LDL in HepG2 cells were independent of the cell density. Pulse-chase experiments indicated that the internalization rate of surface-bound LDL in HepG2 cells is similar to that of fibroblasts. Endosomal loading of 125I-LDL by incubation at 18 degrees C for 4.5 h, followed by a shift to 37 degrees C, resulted in degradation of LDL within 30 min in fibroblasts, whereas in HepG2 cells the lag time of the degradation was 90 min. In parallel experiments using subcellular fractionation by Percoll-gradient centrifugation of homogenized cells and 125I-tyramine-cellobiose-labelled LDL, we observed that in both cell types LDL is equally rapidly shifted from a low- to a high-density compartment (within 15 min), representing the endosomal and the late-endosomal plus lysosomal compartment respectively. We conclude that in HepG2 cells the cell-bound LDL, upon internalization, goes through the intracellular itinerary at the same rate as in fibroblasts, but that either the fusion between late endosomes and lysosomes or the lysosomal degradation itself is proceeding at a lower efficiency. A low degradation rate of LDL may contribute to explain the relatively weak down-regulation of the LDL-receptor activity in HepG2 cells by LDL.
在先前的研究中我们已经表明,在HepG2细胞中,与成纤维细胞相比,用低密度脂蛋白(LDL)孵育细胞时,LDL受体仅被微弱地下调。为了解释LDL受体活性下调的这种差异,我们同时研究了两种细胞系中125I标记的LDL的细胞内加工过程。用125I-LDL孵育HepG2细胞后,降解产物在90分钟时开始出现,而在成纤维细胞中,这个延迟时间仅为30分钟。在37℃孵育长达5小时的情况下,HepG2细胞中的降解效率(代表LDL的降解/细胞结合比率)不到成纤维细胞的50%。HepG2细胞中LDL降解的较长延迟时间和低效率与细胞密度无关。脉冲追踪实验表明,HepG2细胞中表面结合的LDL的内化速率与成纤维细胞相似。在18℃孵育4.5小时使125I-LDL进行内体装载,随后转移至37℃,导致成纤维细胞中的LDL在30分钟内降解,而在HepG2细胞中,降解的延迟时间为90分钟。在使用Percoll梯度离心对匀浆细胞进行亚细胞分级分离和125I-酪胺-纤维二糖标记的LDL的平行实验中,我们观察到在两种细胞类型中,LDL均同样迅速地从低密度区室转移至高密度区室(在15分钟内),分别代表内体区室和晚期内体加溶酶体区室。我们得出结论,在HepG2细胞中,细胞结合的LDL内化后,以与成纤维细胞相同的速率经历细胞内行程,但晚期内体与溶酶体之间的融合或溶酶体降解本身的效率较低。LDL的低降解速率可能有助于解释LDL对HepG2细胞中LDL受体活性的下调作用相对较弱的原因。