Abstract

Chromogranin A (secretory protein-I) is an acidic, sulfated glycoprotein found in secretory granules of most endocrine cells but not in exocrine or epithelial cells. Parathyroid chromogranin A is sulfated on tyrosine residues, whereas adrenal chromogranin A appears to be sulfated mainly on oligosaccharide residues. Chromogranin B, on the other hand, is tyrosine-sulfated in the bovine adrenal whereas this protein is absent from the parathyroid. The role of this tissue- or species-specific sulfation of chromogranin is not known. Tyrosine sulfation is a common post-translational modification of proteins in the exocytotic pathway and has been suggested to play a role in the sorting or intracellular transport of secretory proteins. To test this, porcine parathyroid tissue slices were metabolically labeled with 35SO4 and [3H]Lys, and the tissue and incubation medium analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, immunoblotting, and immunoprecipitation with chromogranin A-specific antiserum or by radioimmunoassay for parathormone. Secretion of total and 3H-labeled chromogranin A was about 3- and 7-fold higher, respectively, at 0.5 mM than at 3.0 mM Ca2+, and secretion of 35SO4-labeled chromogranin A was 67-fold higher. This indicates that either sulfated chromogranin A is directed primarily to the Ca2+-regulated pathway or that sulfation occurs following sorting to this pathway. Sodium chlorate (1-10 mM) inhibited sulfation in a dose-dependent manner by up to 95% but it had no effect on the onset or rate of chromogranin A secretion. These data indicate that regulated secretion of parathyroid chromogranin A does not require sulfation of tyrosine residues.

Highlights

  • A is an acidic, sulfated glycoprotein found in secretory granules of most endocrine cells but not in exocrine or epithelial cells

  • B, on the other hand, is tyrosine-sulfated in the bovine adrenal whereas this protein is absent from the parathyroid

  • Sodium chlorate (l-10 IIIM) inhibited sulfation in a dosedependent manner by up to 95% but it had no effect on the onset or rate of chromogranin

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Summary

The abbreviations used are

A; PAGE, polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis; PTH, parathormone; SDS, sodium dodecyl sulfate; Hepes, 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-l-piperazineethanesulfonic acid. Sulfation of tyrosine residues is a common post-translational modification of proteins in the exocytotic pathway and tyrosine sulfate has been detected in regulated and constitutively secreted proteins as well as plasma membrane proteins (see Huttner, 1988). II (chromogranin C), both of which are tyrosine sulfated (Falkensammer et al, 1985; Rosa et al, 1985) The latter two proteins are found in a variety of endocrine cells together with CgA, but are not present in the parathyroid (Lassman et al, 1986). Speculated that tyrosine sulfation plays a role in the secretion of chromogranin B and secretogranin Il. In the present study we tested if sulfation of CgA was related to secretion by the parathyroid

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