Differential colchicine effects on the transport of membrane and secretory proteins in rat hepatocytes in vivo: Bipolar secretion of albumin

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Abstract

We carried out a comparative investigation on the effects of colchicine (25 μmoles/100 gm body wt) on the intracellular transport, processing and discharge by secretion or proteolytic processing of a membrane protein (i.e., the polymeric IgA receptor) and a secretory protein (i.e., albumin) in rat hepatocytes. The results obtained indicated the following: (a) the transport and processing of polymeric IgA receptor is strongly inhibited and delayed, but the appearance of secretory component in the bile is not arrested; (b) polymeric IgA receptor reaches the sinusoidal plasmalemma in colchicine‐treated specimens, as it does in controls; (c) albumin discharge into the plasma is strongly inhibited and markedly delayed in colchicinetreated as compared with control animals; (d) the reverse applies for albumin secretion in the bile, which is increased by a large factor; (e) newly synthesized albumin secreted directly from hepatocytes in control and in colchicine‐treated animals is the major source of bile albumin; and (f) colchicine affects in different ways the polymeric IgA receptor and albumin arrival at the sinusoidal front and especially at the biliary front of the hepatocyte. (Hepatology 1992;15:714–721). Copyright © 1992 Wiley Subscription Services, Inc.

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Saucan, L., & Palade, G. E. (1992). Differential colchicine effects on the transport of membrane and secretory proteins in rat hepatocytes in vivo: Bipolar secretion of albumin. Hepatology, 15(4), 714–721. https://doi.org/10.1002/hep.1840150427

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