Publication | Open Access
Cathepsin D is membrane-associated in macrophage endosomes.
259
Citations
23
References
1988
Year
Proteinlipid InteractionCathepsin DImmunologyDetergent Triton X-100Analytical UltracentrifugationCellular PhysiologyLight Density VesiclesAutophagyEndocytic PathwayProteomicsProtein FunctionBiochemistryMembrane BiologyAcid Protease ActivityCell BiologyBiomolecular EngineeringPhagocyteNatural SciencesIntracellular TraffickingCellular BiochemistryMedicine
Previously we identified an acid protease activity which was located in the endosomes of rabbit alveolar macrophages (Diment, S., and Stahl, P.D. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 15311-15317). In this study, the endosomal protease is identified as cathepsin D by immunoprecipitation with polyclonal antibodies raised against rabbit cathepsin D and by NH2-terminal sequence. In order to elucidate the mechanism for targeting of cathepsin D to endosomes, we first examined the membrane association of cathepsin D with light (rho = 1.05 g/ml) and heavy density (rho = 1.1 g/ml) vesicles from Percoll density gradients. After sequential washes, 8.4 and 21.9% of cathepsin D activity remained associated with heavy and light density vesicles, respectively. This membrane-associated cathepsin D could not be solubilized in either buffer at pH 5.0 containing mannose 6-phosphate and EDTA or in buffer at pH 10.6. Solubilization required the detergent Triton X-100. To determine whether membrane-associated cathepsin D was found in endosomes, the enzyme was radioiodinated within endosomes and lysosomes with internalized lactoperoxidase. The membrane-associated form was detected in endosomes, but much less in lysosomes. Biosynthetic studies combined with the same extraction procedure revealed that macrophage cathepsin D is first synthesized as an inactive membrane-associated precursor. The precursor is processed to an active, membrane-associated form and then to the active soluble form found in lysosomes. Our studies provide evidence that 1) cathepsin D is in endosomes of macrophages; 2) cathepsin D is transported to endosomes as a membrane-associated form; and 3) the membrane-associated form is a biosynthetic precursor for the soluble form found in endosomes and lysosomes.
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