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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Intracellular localization of factor VIII-related antigen and fibronectin in cultured human endothelial cells: evidence for divergent routes of intracellular translocation.

Cultured human endothelial cells synthesize and secrete both fibronectin and factor VIII-related antigen (VIIIR:Ag). In immunofluorescence microscopy, intracellular fibronectin was seen diffusely perinuclearly whereas VIIIR:Ag was located both diffusely in the perinuclear cytoplasm and in distinct rod-shaped granules. These granules could, moreover, be visualized with fluorochrome-coupled Ricinus communis agglutinin I (RCA), which also stained the Golgi apparatus as a reticular juxtanuclear structure, and they were identified as Weibel-Palade bodies by immunoelectron microscopy. Puromycin treatment depleted intracellular fibronectin but did not affect the granular localization of VIIIR:Ag. A short exposure of the cells to monensin caused a juxtanuclear accumulation of fibronectin at the Golgi region whereas VIIIR:Ag only was seen in rounded cytoplasmic granules. A prolonged monensin treatment brought about a cytoplasmic accumulation of fibronectin-containing vesicles whereas VIIIR:Ag showed no accumulation and there was no codistribution between granules containing fibronectin or VIIIR:Ag. Type IV procollagen, on the other hand, was distinctly co-localized with fibronectin. In monensin-treated cells RCA mainly stained the VIIIR:Ag-containing vesicles whereas Concanavalin A (Con A) appeared to label the fibronectin-containing vesicles. Immunoelectron microscopy of these cells revealed VIIIR:Ag in some vacuolar structures and typical Weibel-Palade bodies could not be identified. Exposure of the cells to tunicamycin, on the other hand, caused a prominent cytoplasmic accumulation of VIIIR:Ag and, within 96 h, led to the disappearance of most of the VIIIR:Ag-positive granules but did not affect the intracellular distribution of fibronectin. These results, which show that metabolical inhibitors affect differently the intracellular compartmentalization of fibronectin and VIIIR:Ag, indicate, that the two glycoproteins have divergent intracellular pathways in cultured human endothelial cells.[1]

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