Stimulated secretion of endothelial von Willebrand factor is accompanied by rapid redistribution to the cell surface of the intracellular granule membrane protein GMP-140

Ryuichi Hattori(Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation), Karen Hamilton(Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation), Robert D. Fugate(Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation), Rodger P. McEver(Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation), Peter J. Sims(Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation)
Journal of Biological Chemistry
May 1, 1989
Cited by 648Open Access
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Abstract

We have examined the cell activation-dependent redistribution of the intracellular granule membrane protein GMP-140 of human endothelial cells. By dual-label immunofluorescence, the distribution of GMP-140 within cultured human umbilical vein endothelial cells was found to coincide with the distribution of von Willebrand factor (vWF), suggesting that GMP-140 is located in the membranes of vWF-containing storage granules. Stimulation of vWF secretion resulted in an increase in GMP-140 on the cell surface, as detected by increased binding of the monoclonal antibody S12 which recognizes the extracytoplasmic domain of GMP-140. For each agonist tested (histamine, thrombin, phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate, and the calcium ionophore A23187) a dose-dependent redistribution of GMP-140 to the endothelial surface was observed which closely paralleled the dose-dependent secretion of vWF into the cell supernatant. When cells were maximally stimulated by histamine in the presence of antibody S12, a 4-fold increase in S12 uptake by the cells was observed. This increase occurred rapidly and reached a plateau by 10 min. In contrast, when histamine-stimulated cells were first fixed with paraformaldehyde or chilled to 4 degrees C before addition of antibody S12, only a transient increase in cell surface GMP-140 was detected. Under these conditions of arrested membrane turnover during antibody binding, cell surface GMP-140 was maximal 3 min after histamine stimulation and then declined to control levels by 20 min. These data suggest that stimulated secretion of vWF from endothelial cells entails fusion of vWF-containing storage granules with the plasma membrane. Once inserted into the plasma membrane, GMP-140 is subsequently removed from the endothelial surface, most likely by an endocytic mechanism.


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