Publication | Open Access
Membrane localization of the pertussis toxin-sensitive G-protein subunits alpha i-2 and alpha i-3 and expression of a metallothionein-alpha i-2 fusion gene in LLC-PK1 cells.
112
Citations
20
References
1990
Year
ImmunologyAlpha SubunitsCellular PhysiologySignaling PathwayMembrane LocalizationReceptor Tyrosine KinaseCell SignalingCell PhysiologyLlc-pk1 CellsProtein FunctionMolecular PhysiologyAlpha I-3Apical MembraneRenal PathophysiologyCell BiologySignal TransductionPhysiologyCellular BiochemistryMedicineAlpha IKidney Research
The renal epithelial cell line LLC-PK1 has topographically distinct regulatory roles for the alpha subunits of pertussis toxin-sensitive guanine nucleotide regulatory proteins (alpha i subunit); these include the inhibition of adenylyl cyclase at the basolateral membrane and the stimulation of Na+ channel activity at the apical membrane. We now report that LLC-PK1 cells contain two members of the alpha i protein family, alpha i-2 and alpha i-3, which have distinct cellular locations consistent with their diverse functional roles. By using specific alpha i antibodies and immunofluorescence, the alpha i-2 subunit was found to be localized to the basolateral membrane, whereas the alpha i-3 subunit was concentrated in the Golgi and was also detectable at low levels on apical membranes in some cells. Induction of a chimeric mouse metallothionein 1-rat or canine alpha i-2 gene stably transfected into the LLC-PK1 cells produced an increase in the content of the alpha i-2 subunit, which was targeted only to the basolateral membrane. These findings suggest that alpha i subunit specificity for effectors may be achieved in polarized renal epithelial cells by their geographic segregation to different cellular membranes. The LLC-PK1 cell stably transfected with the metallothionein-alpha i-2 fusion gene will provide a model for the study of guanine nucleotide regulatory protein function in epithelia.
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1983 | 25.2K | |
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1982 | 2.8K | |
1987 | 759 | |
Gi2 mediates alpha 2-adrenergic inhibition of adenylyl cyclase in platelet membranes: in situ identification with G alpha C-terminal antibodies. William F. Simonds, Paul K. Goldsmith, Juan Codina, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Alpha 2-Adrenergic InhibitionImmunologyGlycobiologyAlpha SubunitsSynthetic Decapeptides | 1989 | 374 |
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1987 | 139 |
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