Vesicular integral protein of 36 kDa (VIP36) is an intracellular lectin recognizing high-mannose type glycans and is highly expressed in salivary glands, especially the parotid gland, which secretes alpha-amylase in large quantities. Here immunoelectron microscopy demonstrated that VIP36 was primarily localized to secretory vesicles in the glandula parotis of the rat, where alpha-amylase also resided. A secretory vesicle fraction, prepared by Percoll density gradient centrifugation, contained both VIP36 and alpha-amylase.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe vesicular integral membrane protein VIP36 belongs to the family of animal lectins and may act as a cargo receptor trafficking certain glycoproteins in the secretory pathway. Immunoelectron microscopy of GH3 cells provided evidence that endogenous VIP36 is localized mainly in 70-100-nm-diameter uncoated transport vesicles between the exit site on the ER and the neighboring cis-Golgi cisterna. The thyrotrophin-releasing hormone (TRH) stimulation and treatment with actin filament-perturbing agents, cytochalasin D or B or latrunculin-B, caused marked aggregation of the VIP36-positive vesicles and the appearance of a VIP36-positive clustering structure located near the cis-Golgi cisterna.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVIP36 (36-kD vesicular integral membrane protein), originally purified from Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) epithelial cells, belongs to a family of animal lectins and may act as a cargo receptor. To understand its role in secretory processes, we performed morphological analysis of the rat parotid gland. Immunoelectron microscopy provided evidence that endogenous VIP36 is localized in the trans-Golgi network, on immature granules, and on mature secretory granules in acinar cells.
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