Subcellular localization of Gi alpha in human neutrophils.

  1. D Rotrosen,
  2. J I Gallin,
  3. A M Spiegel and
  4. H L Malech
  1. Bacterial Diseases Section, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Bethesda, Maryland 20892.

    Abstract

    Subcellular fractions were prepared from human neutrophils by sucrose density gradient centrifugation and analyzed for Gi-like proteins by pertussis toxin-catalyzed [32P]ADP-ribosylation and by immunoblotting with rabbit antiserum AS/6 which recognizes purified transducin and Gi, but not Gs or Go alpha-subunits. In resting cells, approximately equal to 60% of pertussis toxin substrate retrieved from the sucrose density gradient localized to the plasma membrane-enriched fraction, approximately equal to 35% to the specific granule-enriched fraction, and approximately equal to 5% to cytosol. The azurophil granule-enriched fraction did not contain pertussis toxin substrate. In contrast to plasma membrane, the specific granule-enriched fraction demonstrated increased AS/6 immunoreactivity of a approximately equal to 41-kDa protein relative to a approximately equal to 40-kDa protein. Within the specific granule-enriched fraction, the peak of pertussis toxin substrate detected immunochemically or by [32P]ADP-ribosylation sedimented at a lighter density (rho = 1.6 g/ml) than did lactoferrin (rho = 1.19 g/ml), suggesting that the intracellular compartment bearing pertussis toxin substrate may not be the lactoferrin containing specific granule, per se. Furthermore, in neutrophils exposed to 10(-8) M N-formylmethionylleucylphenylalanine, a weak degranulating stimulus (7% lactoferrin degranulation), there was a 31-42% decline in pertussus toxin-catalyzed [32P]ADP-ribosylation of approximately equal to 40-41-kDa proteins in the specific granule-enriched fraction accompanied by a near-quantitative increase in labeling of plasma membrane. The pool of intracellular formyl peptide receptors localized to the specific granule-enriched fraction appeared functionally coupled to a cosedimenting G-protein in experiments demonstrating modulation of high affinity N-formylmethionylleucyl[3H]phenylalanine binding by guanosine 5'-(3-O-thio)triphosphate or pertussis toxin. The data indicate that neutrophils contain a surface translocatable pool of intracellular G-protein sedimenting in the specific granule-enriched fraction and support the view that mobilization of intracellular G-protein represents a mechanism by which cells can regulate receptor activity.

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