SorLA regulates the activity of lipoprotein lipase by intracellular trafficking

SC Klinger, S Glerup, MK Raarup… - Journal of cell …, 2011 - journals.biologists.com
SC Klinger, S Glerup, MK Raarup, MC Mari, M Nyegaard, G Koster, T Prabakaran
Journal of cell science, 2011journals.biologists.com
Many different tissues and cell types exhibit regulated secretion of lipoprotein lipase (LPL).
However, the sorting of LPL in the trans Golgi network has not, hitherto, been understood in
detail. Here, we characterize the role of SorLA (officially known as SorLA-1 or sortilin-related
receptor) in the intracellular trafficking of LPL. We found that LPL bound to SorLA under
neutral and acidic conditions, and in cells this binding mainly occurred in vesicular
structures. SorLA expression changed the subcellular distribution of LPL so it became more …
Many different tissues and cell types exhibit regulated secretion of lipoprotein lipase (LPL). However, the sorting of LPL in the trans Golgi network has not, hitherto, been understood in detail. Here, we characterize the role of SorLA (officially known as SorLA-1 or sortilin-related receptor) in the intracellular trafficking of LPL. We found that LPL bound to SorLA under neutral and acidic conditions, and in cells this binding mainly occurred in vesicular structures. SorLA expression changed the subcellular distribution of LPL so it became more concentrated in endosomes. From the endosomes, LPL was further routed to the lysosomes, which resulted in a degradation of newly synthesized LPL. Consequently, an 80% reduction of LPL activity was observed in cells that expressed SorLA. By analogy, SorLA regulated the vesicle-like localization of LPL in primary neuronal cells. Thus, LPL binds to SorLA in the biosynthetic pathway and is subsequently transported to endosomes. As a result of this SorLA mediated-transport, newly synthesized LPL can be routed into specialized vesicles and eventually sent to degradation, and its activity thereby regulated.
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