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      Direct demonstration of a neonatal Fc receptor (FcRn)-driven endosomal sorting pathway for cellular recycling of albumin

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          Abstract

          Albumin is the most abundant plasma protein involved in the transport of many compounds, such as fatty acids, bilirubin, and heme. The endothelial cellular neonatal Fc receptor (FcRn) has been suggested to play a central role in maintaining high albumin plasma levels through a cellular recycling pathway. However, direct mapping of this process is still lacking. This work presents the use of wild-type and engineered recombinant albumins with either decreased or increased FcRn affinity in combination with a low or high FcRn-expressing endothelium cell line to clearly define the FcRn involvement, intracellular pathway, and kinetics of albumin trafficking by flow cytometry, quantitative confocal microscopy, and an albumin-recycling assay. We found that cellular albumin internalization was proportional to FcRn expression and albumin-binding affinity. Albumin accumulation in early endosomes was independent of FcRn-binding affinity, but differences in FcRn-binding affinities significantly affected the albumin distribution between late endosomes and lysosomes. Unlike albumin with low FcRn-binding affinity, albumin with high FcRn-binding affinity was directed less to the lysosomes, suggestive of FcRn-directed albumin salvage from lysosomal degradation. Furthermore, the amount of recycled albumin in cell culture media corresponded to FcRn-binding affinity, with a ∼3.3-fold increase after 1 h for the high FcRn-binding albumin variant compared with wild-type albumin. Together, these findings uncover an FcRn-dependent endosomal cellular-sorting pathway that has great importance in describing fundamental mechanisms of intracellular albumin recycling and the possibility to tune albumin-based therapeutic effects by FcRn-binding affinity.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Biol Chem
          J. Biol. Chem
          jbc
          jbc
          JBC
          The Journal of Biological Chemistry
          American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology (11200 Rockville Pike, Suite 302, Rockville, MD 20852-3110, U.S.A. )
          0021-9258
          1083-351X
          11 August 2017
          21 June 2017
          : 292
          : 32
          : 13312-13322
          Affiliations
          From the []Novozymes A/S, 2880 Bagsværd, Denmark,
          [§ ]Interdisciplinary Nanoscience Center (iNANO), Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics, Aarhus University, 8000 Aarhus C, Denmark, and
          []Albumedix Ltd., NG7 1FD Nottingham, United Kingdom
          Author notes
          [2 ] To whom correspondence should be addressed. Tel.: 45-87155831; E-mail: kenh@ 123456inano.au.dk .
          [1]

          Both authors contributed equally to this work.

          Edited by Luke O'Neill

          Article
          PMC5555191 PMC5555191 5555191 M117.794248
          10.1074/jbc.M117.794248
          5555191
          28637874
          07e0a97b-4441-4c6c-b8fc-b804f0960095
          © 2017 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
          History
          : 19 May 2017
          : 14 June 2017
          Categories
          Protein Structure and Folding

          endosome,cellular recycling,receptor recycling,intracellular trafficking,intracellular processing,Fc receptor,albumin

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