Abstract

Addition of 20 mM ammonium chloride during in vitro chase incubation of [35S]methionine pulse-labeled parotid tissue does not perturb the magnitude or radiochemical composition of secretion stimulated by isoproterenol. An apparent inhibition of stimulated output of radiolabeled secretory proteins that was observed when ammonium chloride was added immediately postpulse (but not at later time points prior to stimulation) could be accounted for by slowdown in Golgi transit of exocrine secretory protein at a stage prior to completion of terminal glycosylation. Thus, ammonium chloride does not block entry of newly synthesized secretory proteins into the secretagogue-releasable storage granule compartment. By contrast, ammonium chloride increases the output and substantially alters the relative composition of newly synthesized protein in unstimulated secretion. The latter effects could be assigned to stages of intracellular transport that normally occur at chase times greater than 60 min postpulse and thus are focused within the maturing acinar storage granule. Notably, the compositional alterations cannot reflect the preferential exocytosis of immature granules. Taken together, these results suggest that the sorting of exocrine secretory proteins into the secretagogue-regulated pathway may not involve positive selection by a pH-based process initiated in a pregranule compartment. Rather, unstimulated secretion may arise by a negative sorting (or exclusion) process that occurs during compaction of proteins for storage within maturing granules and that is perturbed by weak base addition. Sorted (or excluded) proteins would appear to follow the vesicular (nongranular) secretory pathway that originates in maturing granules (von Zastrow, M., and Castle, J.D. (1987) J. Cell Biol. 105, 2675-2684).

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