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  • Title: Specific mannose-6-phosphate receptor-independent sorting of pro-cathepsin D in breast cancer cells.
    Author: Capony F, Braulke T, Rougeot C, Roux S, Montcourrier P, Rochefort H.
    Journal: Exp Cell Res; 1994 Nov; 215(1):154-63. PubMed ID: 7957663.
    Abstract:
    The secretion of pro-cathepsin D (pro-cath-D) in some human metastatic breast cancer cells (MCF7, MDA/MB231), contrary to normal mammary cells, is not increased by ammonium chloride treatment, indicating a mannose-6-phosphate-independent sorting to lysosomes. By studying a variety of cell lines and lysosomal enzymes, we show that secretion of newly synthesized pro-cath-D was not mediated by the 46-kDa mannose-6-phosphate receptor (MPR) and that its resistance to NH4Cl for secretion was specific to cath-D and not to other lysosomal enzymes. This resistance appeared to be correlated with the basal hypersecretion of pro-cath-D, but not with its overexpression. By contrast, pro-cath-D secretion was increased by NH4Cl in fibroblasts and nontumoral epithelial mammary cells, suggesting a specificity for cancer cells. Immunofluorescence staining showed that pro-cath-D, but neither cathepsin B nor beta-hexosaminidase, accumulated in intracytoplasmic vesicles of cells treated with ammonium chloride. In pulse--chase experiments and by subcellular fractionation on Percoll gradient, cath-D was found to be sorted into dense lysosomes whether cells were treated or not by NH4Cl. Treatment of cells with NH4Cl, however, inhibited processing and maturation of pro-cath-D, which was also observed in light vesicles in the absence of NH4Cl. Part of pro-cath-D, but not processed enzyme, was also found to be membrane associated in saponin-permeabilized cells. We conclude that in breast cancer cells, the MPR-independent pathway of pro-cath-D to lysosome is predominant compared to normal cells and other lysosomal enzymes. This alternative pathway should therefore be considered, in addition to MPR, to explain pro-cath-D sorting and activation in breast cancer cells.
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