Oncostatin M regulates membrane traffic and stimulates bile canalicular membrane biogenesis in HepG2 cells

Johanna M. Van der Wouden, Sven C.D. Van IJzendoorn, Dick Hoekstra

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

42 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Hepatocytes are the major epithelial cells of the liver and they display membrane polarity: the sinusoidal membrane representing the basolateral surface, while the bile canalicular membrane is typical of the apical membrane. In polarized HepG2 cells an endosomal organelle, SAC, fulfills a prominent role in the biogenesis of the canalicular membrane, reflected by its ability to sort and redistribute apical and basolateral sphingolipids. Here we show that SAC appears to be a crucial target for a cytokine-induced signal transduction pathway, which stimulates membrane transport exiting from this compartment promoting apical membrane biogenesis. Thus, oncostatin M, an IL-6-type cytokine, stimulates membrane polarity development in HepG2 cells via the gp130 receptor unit, which activates a protein kinase A-dependent and sphingomyelin-marked membrane transport pathway from SAC to the apical membrane. To exert its signal transducing function, gp130 is recruited into detergent-resistant membrane microdomains at the basolateral membrane. These data provide a clue for a molecular mechanism that couples the biogenesis of an apical plasma membrane domain to the regulation of intracellular transport in response to an extracellular, basolaterally localized stimulus.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)6409-6418
Number of pages10
JournalEMBO Journal
Volume21
Issue number23
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2-Dec-2002

Keywords

  • apical plasma membrane
  • HepG2 cell
  • oncostatin M
  • sphingomyelin
  • subapical compartment
  • POLARIZED SPHINGOLIPID TRANSPORT
  • PLASMA-MEMBRANE
  • SUBAPICAL COMPARTMENT
  • INTERLEUKIN-6 FAMILY
  • CYTOKINES
  • PROTEIN
  • DOMAIN
  • GP130
  • EXOCYTOSIS
  • DISTINCT

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