Protein Degradation in Normal and Beige (Chediak-Higashi) Mice
Open Access
- 1 February 1978
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Society for Clinical Investigation in Journal of Clinical Investigation
- Vol. 61 (2) , 260-268
- https://doi.org/10.1172/jci108935
Abstract
The beige mouse, C57BL/6 (bg/bg), is an animal model for the Chediak-Higashi syndrome in man, a disease characterized morphologically by giant lysosomes in most cell types. Half-lives for the turnover of [14C]bicarbonate-labeled total soluble liver protein were determined in normal and beige mice. No significant differences were observed between the normal and mutant strain for both rapidly and slowly turning-over classes of proteins. Glucagon treatment during the time-course of protein degradation had similar effects on both normal and mutant strains and led to the conclusion that the rate of turnover of endogenous intracellular protein in the beige mouse liver does not differ from normal. The rates of uptake and degradation of an exogenous protein were determined in normal and beige mice by intravenously injecting 125I-bovine serum albumin and following, in peripheral blood, the loss with time of phosphotungstic acid-insoluble bovine serum albumin and the parallel appearance of phosphotungstic acid-soluble (degraded) material. No significant differences were observed between beige and normal mice in the uptake by liver lysosomes of 125I-bovine serum albumin (t½ = 3.9 and 2.8 h, respectively). However, it was found that lysosomes from livers of beige mice released phosphotungstic acid-soluble radioactivity at a rate significantly slower than normal (t½ = 6.8 and 3.1 h, respectively). This defect in beige mice could be corrected by chronic administration of carbamyl choline (t½ = 3.5 h), a cholinergic agonist which raises intracellular cyclic GMP levels. However, no significant differences between normal and beige mice were observed either in the ability of soluble extracts of liver and kidney to bind [3H]cyclic GMP in vitro or in the basal levels of cyclic AMP in both tissues. The relevance of these observations to the presumed biochemical defect underlying the Chediak-Higashi syndrome is discussed.This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit:
- Microtubule assembly in cultivated Greene melanoma cells is stimulated by dibutyryl adenosine 3':5'-cyclic monophosphate or cholera toxin.The Journal of cell biology, 1976
- Correction of characteristic abnormalities of microtubule function and granule morphology in Chediak-Higashi syndrome with cholinergic agonists.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1976
- Carbamycholine prevents giant granule-formation in cultured fibroblasts from beige (Chediak-Higashi) mice.The Journal of cell biology, 1976
- Defective lysosomal enzyme secretion in kidneys of Chediak-Higashi (beige) mice.The Journal of cell biology, 1975
- THE REGULATORY ROLE OF DIVALENT CATIONS IN HUMAN GRANULOCYTE CHEMOTAXISThe Journal of cell biology, 1974
- pH Induced increase in cyclic GMP reactivity with cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinasesBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1973
- Cyclic GMP and Cell MovementNature, 1973
- DISTRIBUTION OF ANOMALOUS LYSOSOMES IN THE BEIGE MOUSE: A HOMOLOGUE OF CHEDIAK-HIGASHI SYNDROMEJournal of Histochemistry & Cytochemistry, 1973
- Abnormal Bactericidal, Metabolic, and Lysosomal Functions of Chediak-Higashi Syndrome LeukocytesJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1972
- The digestive function of lysosomes as studied by the turnover of ingested foreign macromoleculesProceedings of the Royal Society of London. B. Biological Sciences, 1969