Abstract

Multivesicular bodies (MVB), prelysosomal organelles in the endocytic pathway, were prepared from estrogen-treated rat livers and examined for the presence of ATP-dependent proton transport. Vesicle acidification, assessed by acridine orange fluorescence quenching, was ATP dependent (ATP much greater than GTP, UTP), was enriched 25-fold over homogenate, was abolished by pretreatment with protonophores or a nonionic detergent, exhibited a pH optimum of 7.5, was inhibited by N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) (IC50 approximately 5 microM) and N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (IC50 approximately 5 microM), and was resistant to inhibition by vanadate, ouabain, and oligomycin. Acidification exhibited no specific cation requirement; however, maximal rates of acidification depended upon the presence of Cl- (Km approximately 20 mM). Other anions were less effective in supporting acidification (Cl- greater than Br- greater than much greater than gluconate, NO-3, SO2-4, and mannitol), and indeed NO-3 inhibited acidification even in the presence of 150 mM Cl-. The proton transport mechanism appeared to be electrogenic based on: (a) enhancement of acidification by valinomycin in the presence of K gluconate, and (b) ATP-dependent fluorescence quenching of bis(3-phenyl-5-oxoisoxasol-4-yl)pentamethine oxonol, a membrane potential-sensitive anionic dye. Furthermore, the magnitude of the pH and electrical gradients generated by the proton transport mechanism appeared to vary inversely in the presence and absence of Cl-. Finally, MVB exhibited ATPase activity that was resistant to ouabain and oligomycin, but was inhibited 32.3% by 1 mM NEM, 33.7% by 200 microM dicyclohexylcarbodiimide, and 18.7% by KNO3. In isolated MVB, therefore, the NEM-sensitive ATPase activity may represent the enzymatic equivalent of a proton pump. These studies identify and characterize an ATP-dependent electrogenic proton transport process in rat liver MVB which shares many of the properties of the proton pump described in clathrin-coated vesicles, endosomes, lysosomes, Golgi, and endoplasmic reticulum from liver and other tissues. Acidification of MVB differed somewhat from that of rat liver clathrin-coated vesicles in response to Br- and NO-3, suggesting that membrane properties of these two organelles might differ.

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