The exocrine protein rat anionic trypsinogen has been expressed and is secreted from the murine anterior pituitary tumor cell line AtT-20. We examined which secretory pathway trypsinogen takes to the surface of this endocrine-derived cell line. The "constitutive" pathway externalizes proteins rapidly and in the absence of an external stimulus. In the alternate, "regulated" pathway, proteins are stored in secretory granules until the cells are stimulated to secrete with 8-Br-cAMP. On the basis of indirect immunofluorescence localization, stimulation of release, and subceltular fractionation, we find that trypsinogen is targeted into the regulated secretory pathway in ART-20 cells. In contrast, laminin, an endogenous secretory glycoprotein, is shown to be secreted constitutively. Thus it appears that the transport apparatus for the regulated secretory pathway in endocrine cells can recognize not only endocrine prohormones, but also the exocrine protein trypsinogen, which suggests that a similar sorting mechanism is used by endocrine and exocrine cells. © 1985, Rockefeller University Press., All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Burgess, T. L., Craik, C. S., & Kelly, R. B. (1985). The exocrine protein trypsinogen is targeted into the secretory granules of an endocrine cell line: Studies by gene transfer. Journal of Cell Biology, 101(2), 639–645. https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.101.2.639
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