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Compartmentalization of proline pools and apparent rates of collagen and non-collagen protein synthesis in arterial smooth μscle cells in culture

Authors :
Opsahl, W P
Ehrhart, L A
Source :
Biochemical Journal; April 1987, Vol. 243 Issue: 1 p137-144, 8p
Publication Year :
1987

Abstract

Rates of collagen and non-collagen protein synthesis in rabbit arterial smooth muscle cells (SMC) were determined by using the specific (radio)activity of [3H]proline in the extracellular, intracellular, and prolyl-tRNA pools. The intracellular free proline specific activity was only 25% of the extracellular value in cultures incubated for 12 h in 0.25 mM-proline. The specific activity of prolyl-tRNA was less than 10% of the extracellular specific activity. Increasing the extracellular proline concentration 10-fold (to 2.5 mM), while keeping the extracellular specific activity of proline constant, resulted in equilibration of the specific activities of intracellular and extracellular free proline, but the specific activity of prolyl-tRNA remained at less than 10% of the extracellular specific activity. Therefore, calculated rates of collagen and non-collagen protein synthesis were greatly underestimated using the intracellular or extracellular specific activity of proline. SMC were also incubated with 0.1 mM-[14C]ornithine in 0.25 nM or 2.5 mM non-labelled proline to examine synthesis de novo of proline and prolyl-tRNA from ornithine. In SMC cultures containing 0.25 mM unlabelled proline, the specific activity of intracellular ornithine was approx. 45% of the extracellular specific activity, due to the production of unlabelled ornithine. The specific activity of ornithine-derived intracellular free proline in SMC incubated with 2.5 mM-proline was significantly lower than in SMC incubated in 0.25 mM-proline, due to the influx of unlabelled proline. However, a corresponding difference in the specific activity of [14C]prolyl-tRNA between SMC in 0.25 mM- or 2.5 mM-proline was not observed. Ornithine-derived [14C]proline was incorporated into proteins in a manner different from that of exogenously added radiolabelled proline. A much higher proportion of the proline synthesized de novo was channelled into collagen synthesis relative to total protein synthesis. Together, these results show that intracellular proline pools are highly compartmentalized in arterial SMC. They also suggest that proline synthesized from ornithine may enter a prolyl-tRNA pool separate from that of proline entering from the extracellular medium.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
02646021 and 14708728
Volume :
243
Issue :
1
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Biochemical Journal
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs51300306
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1042/bj2430137