| Am J Respir Cell Mol Biol. 1991 Jun;4(6):479-88. |
|
Isolation and partial characterization of
pneumocin, a novel apical membrane surface glycoprotein marker
of rat type II cells.
Lwebuga-Mukasa JS.
Department of Internal Medicine, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut 06510.
Rat alveolar type II pneumocytes,
in situ, label with Maclura pomifera
agglutinin (MPA), a plant lectin
that recognizes alpha-galactosyl oligosaccharide
residues of glycoproteins and glycolipids.
To study the glycoproteins recognized by the lectin, MPA lectin
affinity chromatography was used to isolate a novel glycoprotein, pneumocin, from type II and whole rat lung cell membranes.
Pneumocin isolated from adult rat lungs was a non-disulfide-linked
sialoglycoprotein with an Mr of 165 kD.
Asparagine-linked oligosaccharides contributed 5
to 10% to the Mr. Two-dimensional chymotryptic peptide
maps of pneumocin isolated from whole lung membranes
and type II cells were similar. The glycoprotein partitioned in the detergent
phase on Triton X-114 phase separation. Murine monoclonal
antibodies developed against the purified glycoprotein localized on apical
membranes of type II pneumocytes in situ. The antibodies
did not label type I cells or lamellar bodies but labeled luminal surfaces
of vesicular structures of type II cells. Isolated type II cells labeled with
antibodies after 1 d in culture but showed significantly less staining of
cells after 4 d of culture. These observations demonstrate that pneumocin is a cell surface sialoglycoprotein
marker of type II cells. Western blot analysis of liver and kidney cell membranes
suggest that related glycoproteins may also be present
in those tissues. The isolation technique and monoclonal antibodies should
permit further characterization and functional studies of the glycoprotein.
PMID: 2054190 [PubMed
- indexed for MEDLINE]