Treatment of short-term monolayer cultures of rat hepatocytes with the proton ionophore, monensin, abolishes asialoglycoprotein degradation, despite little effect of the drug on either surface binding of ligand or internalization of prebound ligand. Centrifuging cell homogenates on Percoll density gradients indicates that, as a result of monensin treatment, ligand does not enter lysosomes but sediments instead in a lower density subcellular fraction that is likely an endocytic vesicle. Analyzing the degree of receptor association of intracellular ligand revealed that monensin prevents the dissociation of the receptor-ligand complex that normally occurs subsequent to endocytosis. The weak base, chloroquine, also blocks this intracellular dissociation. Evidence from sequential substitution experiments is presented, indicating that monensin and chloroquine act at the same point in the sequence of events leading to ligand dissociation. These data are discussed in terms of a pH-mediated dissociation of the receptor-ligand complex within a prelysosomal endocytic vesicle.
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1 June 1983
Article|
June 01 1983
Monensin inhibits intracellular dissociation of asialoglycoproteins from their receptor.
J Harford
A W Wolkoff
G Ashwell
R D Klausner
Online ISSN: 1540-8140
Print ISSN: 0021-9525
J Cell Biol (1983) 96 (6): 1824–1828.
Citation
J Harford, A W Wolkoff, G Ashwell, R D Klausner; Monensin inhibits intracellular dissociation of asialoglycoproteins from their receptor.. J Cell Biol 1 June 1983; 96 (6): 1824–1828. doi: https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.96.6.1824
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