Journal of Lipid Research (Jul 2005)
Membrane microdomains in hepatocytes: potential target areas for proteins involved in canalicular bile secretion
Abstract
The formation of hepatic bile requires that water be transported across liver epithelia. Rat hepatocytes express three aquaporins (AQPs): AQP8, AQP9, and AQP0. Recognizing that cholesterol and sphingolipids are thought to promote the assembly of proteins into specialized membrane microdomains, we hypothesized that canalicular bile secretion involves the trafficking of vesicles to and from localized lipid-enriched microdomains in the canalicular plasma membrane. Hepatocyte plasma membranes were sonicated in Triton and centrifuged overnight on a sucrose gradient to yield a Triton-soluble pellet and a Triton-insoluble, sphingolipid-enriched microdomain fraction at the 5%/30% sucrose interface. The detergent-insoluble portion of the hepatocyte plasma membrane was enriched in alkaline phosphatase (a microdomain-positive marker) and devoid of amino-peptidase N (a microdomain-negative marker), enriched in caveolin, both AQP8 and AQP9, but negative for clathrin. The microdomain fractions contained chloride-bicarbonate anion exchanger isoform 2 and multidrug resistance-associated protein 2. Exposure of isolated hepatocytes to glucagon increased the expression of AQP8 but not AQP9 in the microdomain fractions. Sphingolipid analysis of the insoluble fraction showed the predominant species to be sphingomyelin.These data support the presence of sphingolipid-enriched microdomains of the hepatocyte membrane that represent potential localized target areas for the clustering of AQPs and functionally related proteins involved in canalicular bile secretion.