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Elsevier, Journal of Biological Chemistry, 22(268), p. 16248-16252, 1993

DOI: 10.1016/s0021-9258(19)85412-1

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Novel, non-crinophagic, degradation of connecting peptide in transformed pancreatic beta cells

Journal article published in 1993 by M. Neerman Arbez ORCID, P. A. Halban, Halban Pa
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

Proinsulin is converted to equimolar amounts of insulin and connecting peptide (C-peptide) in pancreatic beta cell secretory granules. The fate of C-peptide, which remains soluble in granules while insulin is crystallized, was studied in a rat insulinoma cell line (INS cells). A pulse-chase approach demonstrated that insulin to C-peptide ratios (I/CP) began to rise in INS cells as soon as conversion took place, reaching 2.2:1 at 6 h of chase, and 5.3:1 by 24 h. During the first 4 h of chase, this ratio was inverted in the medium under basal conditions, possibly reflecting preferential secretion of C-peptide via the post granular constitutive-like pathway. However, the amount of C-peptide secreted to the medium (1.4%/h) was trivial compared with the net loss of C-peptide from the INS cells, estimated to be approximately 33% during the 1st h. As no extracellular degradation of insulin or C-peptide was observed, the data show progressive, extensive intracellular degradation of C-peptide. Stimulation of INS granule exocytosis revealed that the I/CP ratio in secretory granules is representative of that of cell extracts, indicating that C-peptide, but not insulin, is lost from functionally competent granules with time. This particular degradative route for C-peptide is thus distinct from crinophagy (fusion of granules and lysosomes) and was found to be much more active in INS cells than in primary islet beta cells.