|
|
K Brix, W Summa, F Lottspeich, V Herzog
J Clin Invest. 1998;
102(2):283
doi:10.1172/JCI1614
Abstract |
Full text
| PDF

T
hyroglobulin is the major secretory protein of thyroid epithelial cells. Part of thyroglobulin reaches the circulation of vertebrates by transcytosis across the epithelial wall of thyroid follicles. Clearance of thyroglobulin from the circulation occurs within the liver via internalization of thyroglobulin by macrophages. Here we have analyzed the interaction of thyroglobulin with the cell surface of J774 macrophages with the aim to identify the possible thyroglobulin-binding sites on macrophages. Binding of thyroglobulin to J774 cells was saturated at approximately 100 nM thyroglobulin with a Kd of 50 nM, and it was competed by the ligand itself. Preincubation of J774 cells with thyroglobulin resulted in downregulation of thyroglobulin-binding sites, indicating internalization of thyroglobulin and its binding proteins. By affinity chromatography, two proteins from J774 cells were identified as thyroglobulin-binding proteins with an apparent molecular mass of approximately 33 kD. Unexpectedly, both proteins were identified as histone H1 by protein sequencing. The occurrence of histone H1 at the plasma membrane was further proven by biotinylation or immunolabeling of J774 cells. The in vitro interaction between histone H1 and thyroglobulin was analyzed by surface plasmon resonance that revealed a Kd at 46 nM. In situ, histone H1 was colocalized to FITC-Tg-containing endocytic compartments of Kupffer cells, i.e., liver macrophages. We conclude that histone H1 is detectable at the cell surface of macrophages where it serves as a thyroglobulin-binding protein and mediates thyroglobulin endocytosis.
Citation information
This citation data is accumulated from CrossRef, which receives citation information from participating publishers, including this journal.
Not all publishers participate in CrossRef, so this information is not comprehensive.
Additionally, data may not reflect the most current citations to this article,
and the data may differ from citation information available from other sources
(for example, Google Scholar, Web of Science, and Scopus).
Total citations by year
in CrossRef
Citations to this article
in CrossRef
(17)
| Title and authors |
Publication |
Year |
Polysialic Acid and Polysialylation to Modulate Antibody Pharmacokinetics
Antony Constantinou, Chen Chen, Mahendra P. Deonarain
|
Therapeutic Proteins Strategies to Modulate Their Plasma Half-Lives
|
2012 |
On the possible use of exogenous histones in cell technology
Olga A. Goryukhina, Sergey V. Martyushin, George P. Pinaev
|
Cell. Biol. Int.
|
2011 |
Plasminogen and Its Receptors as Regulators of Cardiovascular Inflammatory Responses
Riku Das, Elzbieta Pluskota, Edward F. Plow
|
Trends in Cardiovascular Medicine
|
2010 |
Cell cultivation on microspheres coupled with histones
O. A. Goryukhina, S. V. Martyushin, M. I. Blinova, G. G. Poljanskaya, O. A. Cherepanova, G. P. Pinaev
|
Cell Tiss. Biol.
|
2010 |
Role of nonspecific cytotoxic cells in bacterial resistance: Expression of a novel pattern recognition receptor with antimicrobial activity
Meghan A. Connor, Liliana Jaso-Friedmann, John H. Leary, Donald L. Evans
|
Molecular Immunology
|
2009 |
Hypothesis: Bifunctional mitochondrial proteins have centrosomal functions.
Akilah Moore, Andy Golden
|
Environ. Mol. Mutagen.
|
2009 |
Histone H2B as a functionally important plasminogen receptor on macrophages
R. Das, T. Burke, E. F. Plow
|
Blood
|
2007 |
Histone H2A as a transfection agent in crayfish hematopoietic tissue cells
Haipeng Liu, Irene Söderhäll
|
Developmental & Comparative Immunology
|
2007 |
Beyond the walls of the nucleus: the role of histones in cellular signaling and innate immunityThis paper is one of a selection of papers published in this Special Issue, entitled 27th International West Coast Chromatin and Chromosome Conference, and has undergone the Journal's usual peer review process.
Missag H. Parseghian, Keith A. Luhrs
|
Biochem. Cell Biol.
|
2006 |
Rapid induction of apoptosis in B-cell lymphoma by functionally isolated human antibodies
Johan Fransson, Ulla-Carin Tornberg, Carl A.K. Borrebaeck, Roland Carlsson, Björn Frendéus
|
Int. J. Cancer
|
2006 |
|