Surfactant protein C (SP-C) is a small lipopeptide of which the main part consists of a typical valyl-rich transmembrane domain. The protein is expressed as a propeptide (proSP-C) which is processed and sorted via the regulated secretory pathway to the lamellar body, where mature SP-C is stored before secretion into the alveolar space. In this study we investigated the identity of the compartment to which proSP-C is sorted in cells that do not have a regulated secretory pathway, such as CHO cells. By electron microscopy we determined that proSP-C was localized in an uncommon membrane compartment with very regular morphology, which was not present in control cells. This membrane compartment is not influenced by the palmitoylation of proSP-C and is probably derived from the endoplasmic reticulum. However, proSP-C chimeras with artificial transmembrane domains induced a membrane compartment with a different morphology. Therefore we propose that the typical amino acid sequence of the transmembrane domain of proSP-C plays a role in membrane formation and morphology, which may be relevant under physiological conditions.
CITATION STYLE
ten Brinke, A., Posthuma, G., Batenburg, J. J., Haagsman, H. P., Ridder, A. N. J. A., van Golde, L. M. G., & Vaandrager, A. B. (2003). The transmembrane domain of surfactant protein C precursor determines the morphology of the induced membrane compartment in CHO cells. European Journal of Cell Biology, 82(6), 285–294. https://doi.org/10.1078/0171-9335-00320
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