Abstract
GPI-anchored surface proteins mediate many important functions, including transport, signal transduction, adhesion, and protection against complement. They cluster into glycolipid-based membrane domains and caveolae, plasmalemmal vesicles involved in the transcytosis and endocytosis of these surface proteins. However, in lymphocytes, neither the characteristic flask shaped caveolae nor caveolin, a transmembrane protein typical of caveolae, have been observed. Here, we show that the GPI-anchored CD59 molecule on Jurkat T cells is internalized after cross-linking, a process inhibited by nystatin, a sterol chelating agent. Clustered CD59 molecules mostly accumulate in non-coated invaginations of the lymphocyte membrane before endocytosis, in marked contrast with the pattern of CD3-TCR internalization. Cytochalasin H blocked CD59 internalization in lymphocytes, but neither CD3 internalization nor transferrin uptake. Confocal microscopy analysis of F-actin distribution within lymphocytes showed that CD59 clusters were associated with patches of polymerized actin. Also, we found that internalization of CD59 was prevented by the protein kinase C inhibitor staurosporine and by the protein kinase A activator forskolin. Thus, in lymphocytes, as in other cell types, glycolipid-based domains provide sites of integration of signaling pathways involved in GPI-anchored protein endocytosis. This process, which is regulated by both protein kinase C and A activity, is tightly controlled by the dynamic organization of actin cytoskeleton, and may be critical for polarized contacts of circulating cells.
Dates
Type | When |
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Created | 21 years, 3 months ago (May 14, 2004, 9:23 p.m.) |
Deposited | 2 years ago (July 22, 2023, 2:19 a.m.) |
Indexed | 4 months, 3 weeks ago (March 31, 2025, 12:07 p.m.) |
Issued | 29 years, 3 months ago (May 15, 1996) |
Published | 29 years, 3 months ago (May 15, 1996) |
Published Online | 29 years, 3 months ago (May 15, 1996) |
Published Print | 29 years, 3 months ago (May 15, 1996) |
@article{Deckert_1996, title={Endocytosis of GPI-anchored proteins in human lymphocytes: role of glycolipid-based domains, actin cytoskeleton, and protein kinases.}, volume={133}, ISSN={1540-8140}, url={http://dx.doi.org/10.1083/jcb.133.4.791}, DOI={10.1083/jcb.133.4.791}, number={4}, journal={The Journal of cell biology}, publisher={Rockefeller University Press}, author={Deckert, M and Ticchioni, M and Bernard, A}, year={1996}, month=may, pages={791–799} }