Abstract
Gamma Glutamyltranspeptidase (GGT) is a membrane-bound enzyme involved in glutathione metabolism. It is present in rat exocrine pancreas at a level which is only exceeded by the kidney. It has been previously shown that most of the enzyme activity is located in the apical area of the acinar cell, more precisely at the level of zymogen granules and plasma membrane. The aim of the present study was to examine the secretory behavior of that enzyme. Under resting conditions, in vivo, high levels of GGT were found in pancreatic juice and its level was not related to protein concentration. Under secretin infusion, a relatively constant level of GGT was released, and again, there was no correlation between enzyme activity and protein concentration. Following a bolus injection of caerulein, an analog of cholecystokynin, marked and concommitant rises in protein and GGT levels were observed. Ultracentrifugation, as well as gel filtration on Sepharose 4B, demonstrated that the enzyme was not released in a soluble form. This observation is in agreement with in vitro determinations on isolated zymogen granules showing that GGT is totally associated with the ZG membrane and undetect-able in the content of these organelles. The present data show that 1° GGT is released from the rat pancreas acinar cells in a particulate form; 2° GGT release is elicited by hormonal stimulation coinciding with the exocytotic release of secretory proteins. Our observations lead us to propose that in rat pancreas, ZG membrane fragments are released along with secretory proteins during exocytosis.
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