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Fig. 1. Deglycosylation by pharmacological treatments causes aberrant apical targeting of the basolateral Na+/K+-ATPase. (A) Polarized Hep G2 cells (CTL) were subjected to immunofluorescence (IF) staining for Na+/K+-ATPase, E-cadherin, CD147 and DPPIV (green in the colour-merged channel), and co-labelled with Rhodamine-phalloidin (red) to identify F-actin-enriched bile canaliculi (arrows). Na+/K+-ATPase, E-cadherin and CD147 were present mainly on the basolateral membrane (arrowheads), whereas DPPIV was an apical marker (arrows). (B) Hep G2 cells were treated with 20 µM tunicamycin (TM) for 24 hours before the IF experiments. Note that the Na+/K+-ATPase was aberrantly targeted to the apical domain (double arrowheads, stained yellow in the colour panel). Tunicamycin treatment had little effect on the localization of basolateral E-cadherin, CD 147 or apical DPPIV. (C) Statistical analysis of the bile canaliculi that contained the membrane proteins indicated, before (open bars) and after (filled bars) tunicamycin treatment. More than 500 bile canaliculi were counted in each experiment; data are the means ± s.d. of three experiments. (D) Hep G2 cells were subjected to double-IF staining to reveal Na+/K+-ATPase (green) and ER (by anti-calreticulin antibody, red) before and after tunicamycin treatment. Na+/K+-ATPase was present mainly along the basolateral membrane (arrowheads) in control cells. After tunicamycin treatment, the presence of Na+/K+-ATPase was greatly reduced from the basolateral membrane, and gradually increased in the cytoplasmic vesicles (arrows), with no obvious accumulation in the ER. (E) Western blot analysis using Na+/K+-ATPase ß-subunit-specific antibodies on Hep G2 cells treated with mock solution (CTL) or various glycosylation inhibitors: tunicamycin (TM), 1-deoxy-mannojirimycin (DMJ), 1-deoxynojirimycin (DNJ) and Kifunensine (KIF). The fully glycosylated (***ß), intermediately glycosylated (**ß) and the core (*ß) proteins of Na+/K+-ATPase ß-subunit are indicated. Note that the KIF treatment resulted in significant degradation of the ß-subunit protein (arrow). (F) After adding deglycosylating drugs for 24 hours, the percentage of bile canaliculi that contained mistargeted Na+/K+-ATPase was calculated. The bile canaliculi were recognized by F-actin staining; those positively stained for Na+/K+-ATPase ß-subunit were identified. At least 500 bile canaliculi obtained from approximately 25 microscopic images were included in the calculation. Data are the means ± s.d. of three experiments. Bars, 20 µm (A,B); 2 µm (D).
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