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Publication : Identification of LBM180, a lamellar body limiting membrane protein of alveolar type II cells, as the ABC transporter protein ABCA3.

First Author  Mulugeta S Year  2002
Journal  J Biol Chem Volume  277
Issue  25 Pages  22147-55
PubMed ID  11940594 Mgi Jnum  J:297313
Mgi Id  MGI:6478050 Doi  10.1074/jbc.M201812200
Citation  Mulugeta S, et al. (2002) Identification of LBM180, a lamellar body limiting membrane protein of alveolar type II cells, as the ABC transporter protein ABCA3. J Biol Chem 277(25):22147-55
abstractText  Lamellar bodies are the specialized secretory organelles of alveolar type II (ATII) epithelial cells through which the cell packages pulmonary surfactant and regulates its secretion. Surfactant within lamellar bodies is densely packed as circular arrays of lipid membranes and appears to be the product of several trafficking and biosynthetic processes. To elucidate these processes, we reported previously on the generation of a monoclonal antibody (3C9) that recognizes a unique protein of the lamellar body membrane of 180 kDa, which we named LBM180. We report that mass spectrometry of the protein precipitated by this antibody generated a partial sequence that is identical to the ATP-binding cassette protein, ABCA3. Homology analysis of partial sequences suggests that this protein is highly conserved among species. The ABCA3 gene transcript was found in cell lines of human lung origin, in ATII cells of human, rat, and mouse, as well as different tissues of rat, but the highest expression of ABCA3 was observed in ATII cells. Expression of this transcript was at its maximum prior to birth, and hormonal induction of ABCA3 transcript was observed in human fetal lung at the same time as other surfactant protein transcripts were induced, suggesting that ABCA3 is developmentally regulated. Molecular and biochemical studies show that ABCA3 is targeted to vesicle membranes and is found in the limiting membrane of lamellar bodies. Because ABCA3 is a member of a subfamily of ABC transporters that are predominantly known to be involved in the regulation of lipid transport and membrane trafficking, we speculate that this protein may play a key role in lipid organization during the formation of lamellar bodies.
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