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. 1986 May;164(1):115-26.
doi: 10.1016/0014-4827(86)90459-3.

The effect of mannose 6-phosphate on the turnover of the proteoglycans in the extracellular matrix of human fibroblasts

The effect of mannose 6-phosphate on the turnover of the proteoglycans in the extracellular matrix of human fibroblasts

J H Brauker et al. Exp Cell Res. 1986 May.

Abstract

Human fibroblasts (SL66) were cultured in medium containing 35SO2-4 to label the glycosaminoglycans (GAGs). The cells were then detached from the culture dish to leave radioactively-labeled components of the extracellular matrix, hereafter termed 35S-labeled substrate-attached material. When unlabeled SL66 fibroblasts were plated onto this 35S-labeled substrate-attached material, the cells mediated two distinct events: (a) release of radioactivity from the substrate-attached material into the medium; (b) degradation of certain glycosaminoglycans into radioactive components of very low molecular weight including free radioactive sulfate. In the presence of mannose 6-phosphate, however, the degradation of the substrate-attached material by SL66 cells was partially inhibited. Analyses of this effect in terms of the dose-response curve, saccharide specificity, ammonium chloride sensitivity, and the requirement for cells suggest that both an intracellular compartment and the mannose 6-phosphate receptor that binds lysosomal enzymes at the cell surface may play important roles in the turnover and degradation of certain proteoglycans in substrate-attached material.

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