Biosynthesis of Nonspecific Lipid Transfer Protein (Sterol Carrier Protein 2) on Free Polyribosomes as a Larger Precursor in Rat Liver1

Abstract
The biosynthesis of nonspecific lipid transfer protein (nsLTP) was investigated. Total RNA of rat liver was translated in a rabbit reticulocyte lysate cell-free protein-synthesizing system with [35S]methionine as label. The immunoprecipitation of translation products with affinity-purified anti-nsLTP antibody yielded 14.5- and 60-kDa [35S]polypeptides. The molecular mass of the former polypeptide was −1.5 kDa larger than that of the purified mature nsLTP (13 kDa). The site of synthesis of nsLTP was studied by in vitro translation of free and membrane-bound polyribosomal RNAs followed by immunoprecipitation. mRNA for both the 14.5- and 60-kDa polypeptides were found predominantly in the free polyribosomal fraction in both normal and clofibrate-treated rats. Clofibrate, a hypoli-pidemic drug that proliferates peroxisomes, did not increase the relative amount of nsLTP mRNA in rat liver. Pulse-chase experiments in rat hepatoma H-35 cells suggested that nsLTP was synthesized as a larger precursor of 14.5 kDa and converted to a mature form of 13 kDa. We have recently shown that nsLTP is highly concentrated in peroxisomes in rat hepatocytes [Tsuneoka et al. (1988) J. Biochem. 104, 560–564], Taken together, these results suggest that nsLTP is synthesized as a larger precursor of 14.5 kDa on cytoplasmic free polyribosomes, then post-translationally transported to peroxisomes, where the precursor is presumably proteolytically processed to its mature form of 13 kDa. The relationship between the 13-kDa nsLTP and the 60-kDa polypeptide is also discussed.