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Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter October 16, 2007

Post-translational processing of selenoprotein P: implications of glycosylation for its utilisation by target cells

  • Holger Steinbrenner , Lirija Alili , Dominik Stuhlmann , Helmut Sies and Peter Brenneisen
From the journal Biological Chemistry

Abstract

Selenoprotein P (SeP) is a highly glycosylated plasma protein containing up to 10 selenocysteine residues. It is secreted by hepatocytes and also by the human hepatoma cell line HepG2. Pharmacological inhibitors interfering with N-glycosylation, intracellular trafficking and calcium homeostasis were applied to examine post-translational processing and secretion of SeP by HepG2 cells. In parallel, the prototypic secretory glycoprotein α1-antitrypsin was used as technical control. Secretion of SeP was stimulated by increasing the extracellular calcium concentration and by inhibiting the release of sequestered calcium through dantrolene or U-73122. In contrast, brefeldin A and thapsigargin suppressed SeP secretion. Tunicamycin and monensin induced the synthesis of truncated non-glycosylated and partially glycosylated forms of SeP, which were secreted in spite of their impaired glycosylation. Both non-glycosylated and partially glycosylated SeP is utilised as selenium donor by target cells: impaired glycosylation affected neither the ability of SeP to induce the synthesis of the selenoenzyme cytosolic glutathione peroxidase nor its capacity to protect endothelial cells from oxidative stress.


Corresponding author

Received: 2007-4-30
Accepted: 2007-7-23
Published Online: 2007-10-16
Published in Print: 2007-10-01

©2007 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin New York

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