BIOSYNTHESIS OF INTESTINAL MICROVILLAR PROTEINS - LOW-TEMPERATURE ARRESTS BOTH PROCESSING AND INTRACELLULAR-TRANSPORT

  • 1 June 1989
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 49  (1) , 123-127
Abstract
The effect of culture at 20.degree.C on biosynthesis of microvillar enzymes was studied in pig small intestinal mucosal explants. At this temperature, aminopeptidase N (EC 3.4.11.2) and sucrase-isomaltase (EC 3.2.1.48-10) both accumulated intracellularly, predominantly in their transient, high mannose-glycosylated form characteristic of the newly synthesized enzymes prior to the molecular processing taking place in the Golgi complex. The general morphology of the enterocyte was unaffected by culture at low temperature except for the Golgi complex where the cisternae appeared condensed and surrounded by numerous vesicles of 50 to 55 nm. Both molecular processing and microvillar expression could be restored by shifting the temperature to 37.degree.C. Culture at low temperature did not induce any missorting of newly synthesized aminopeptidase N, but both molecular processing and microvillar expression only resumed at a slow rate after increasing the temperature, suggesting that reorganization of the Golgi complex is a time-requiring process.