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In the companion paper (Sztul, E. S., K. E. Howell, and G. E. Palade, J. Cell Biol.,
100:1248-1254), we have shown that pulse labeling of hepatic proteins with [35S]cysteine
can be obtained in vivo in intact rats. Soluble label clears the plasma in approximately
5 min, and incorporated label reaches peak values in the liver approximately 20 min
after injection. In the present study, we show that the 105,000-mol-wt protein (105K),
kinetically the earliest intracellular form of secretory component (SC), is the
predominant form found, between 5 and 20 min postinjection, in homogeneous rough
microsomal fractions. The second kinetically defined form, i.e., 116K, is the
predominant species present in relatively homogeneous, light Golgi fractions in which it
appears at approximately 15 min, and peaks at approximately 25 min, postinjection. The
third kinetically defined form, 120K, is found 30 min after injection as the major SC
species (albeit still accompanied by its immediate precursor, 116K), in a sinusoidal
plasmalemmal fraction isolated by immunoadsorption to anti-SC-coated Sepharose beads.
These findings lead to the following conclusions: (a) SC is synthesized on polysomes
attached to the rough endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membrane; (b) it is partially
translocated across the ER membrane and core glycosylated co-translationally to give a
105K peptide; (c) 105K moves from the ER to the Golgi complex where it is terminally
glycosylated to give the 116K form; (d) the latter moves to the sinusoidal plasmalemma
where it appears together with the final mature form, 120K. Kinetic evidence indicates
that the vesicular carriers involved in the transport of SC from the Golgi complex to
the sinusoidal plasmalemma, and from the latter to the biliary front of the hepatocytes,
are present in a Golgi heavy fraction and a crude carrier vesicle fraction from which
they remain to be isolated, purified, and characterized.
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