首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 703 毫秒
1.
Since epithelial mucin 1 (MUC1) is associated with several adenocarcinomas at the mucosal sites, it is pertinent to test the efficacy of a mucosally targeted vaccine formulation. The B subunit of the Vibrio cholerae cholera toxin (CTB) has great potential to act as a mucosal carrier for subunit vaccines. In the present study we evaluated whether a MUC1 tandem repeat (TR) peptide chemically linked to CTB would break self-antigen tolerance in the transgenic MUC1-tolerant mouse model (MUC1.Tg) through oral or parenteral immunizations. We report that oral immunization with the CTB–MUC1 conjugate along with mucosal adjuvant, unmethylated CpG oligodeoxynucleotide (ODN) and interleukin-12 (IL-12) did not break self-antigen tolerance in MUC1.Tg mice, but induced a strong humoral response in wild-type C57BL/6 mice. However, self-antigen tolerance in the MUC1.Tg mouse model was broken after parenteral immunizations with different doses of the CTB–MUC1 conjugate protein and with the adjuvant CpG ODN co-delivered with CTB–MUC1. Importantly, mice immunized systemically with CpG ODN alone and with CTB–MUC1 exhibited decreased tumor burden when challenged with a mammary gland tumor cell line that expresses human MUC1.  相似文献   

2.
The MUC1 mucin represents a prime target antigen for cancer immunotherapy because it is abundantly expressed and aberrantly glycosylated in carcinomas. Attempts to generate strong humoral immunity to MUC1 by immunization with peptides have generally failed partly because of tolerance. In this study, we have developed chemoenzymatic synthesis of extended MUC1 TR glycopeptides with cancer-associated O-glycosylation using a panel of recombinant human glycosyltransferases. MUC1 glycopeptides with different densities of Tn and STn glycoforms conjugated to KLH were used as immunogens to evaluate an optimal vaccine design. Glycopeptides with complete O-glycan occupancy (five sites per repeat) elicited the strongest antibody response reacting with MUC1 expressed in breast cancer cell lines in both Balb/c and MUC1.Tg mice. The elicited humoral immune response showed remarkable specificity for cancer cells suggesting that the glycopeptide design holds promise as a cancer vaccine. The elicited immune responses were directed to combined glycopeptide epitopes, and both peptide sequence and carbohydrate structures were important for the antigen. A MAb (5E5) with similar specificity as the elicited immune response was generated and shown to have the same remarkable cancer specificity. This antibody may hold promise in diagnostic and immunopreventive measures.  相似文献   

3.
We previously reported that the glycosylated MUC1 tumor antigen circulating as soluble protein in patients' serum is not processed by dendritic cells and does not elicit MHC-Class II-restricted T helper responses in vitro. In contrast, a long synthetic peptide from the MUC1 tandem repeat region is presented by Class II molecules, resulting in the initiation of T helper cell responses. Here we addressed the ability of dendritic cells to present various glycosylated or not glycosylated forms of MUC1 by MHC Class I. We found that three different forms of MUC1, ranging from glycosylated and underglycosylated protein to unglycosylated synthetic peptide, were able to elicit MUC1-specific, Class-I-restricted CTL responses. The efficiency of processing and the resulting strength of CTL activity were inversely correlated with the degree of glycosylation of the antigen. Furthermore, the more efficiently processed 100mer peptide primed a broader repertoire of CTL than the glycosylated protein.  相似文献   

4.
Aberrant glycosylation of mucins is a common phenomenon associated with oncogenic transformation. We investigated the association between expression of the tumor-associated antigens T, Tn, and sialyl-Tn and polymorphism in the length of the MUC1 mucin tandem repeat in a series of gastric carcinomas. We further evaluated the relevance of MUC1 tandem repeat length on the expression of these tumor-associated carbohydrate antigens (TACAs) using a gastric carcinoma cell line model expressing recombinant MUC1 constructs carrying 0, 3, 9, and 42 repeats. Gastric carcinomas showed a high prevalence of Tn and sialyl-Tn antigens, whereas T antigen was less frequently expressed. The expression of T antigen was significantly higher in gastric carcinomas from patients homozygous for MUC1 large tandem repeat alleles. No significant associations were found for Tn and sialyl-Tn antigens. This novel association was reinforced by the gastric carcinoma cell line model experiments, where de novo expression of T antigen was detected in clones transfected with larger VNTR regions. Our results indicate that polymorphism in the MUC1 tandem repeat influences the expression of TACAs in gastric cancer cells and may therefore allow the identification of subgroups of patients that develop more aggressive tumors expressing T antigen.  相似文献   

5.
Brokx RD  Revers L  Zhang Q  Yang S  Mal TK  Ikura M  Gariépy J 《Biochemistry》2003,42(47):13817-13825
The human glycoprotein MUC1 mucin plays a critical role in cancer progression. Breast, ovarian, and colon cancer cells often display unique cell-surface antigens corresponding to aberrantly glycosylated forms of the MUC1 tandem repeat. In this report, (15)N- and (13)C-labeled forms of a recombinant MUC1 construct containing five tandem repeats were used as substrates to define the order and kinetics of addition of N-acetylgalactosamine (GalNAc) moieties by a recombinant active form of the human enzyme UDP-GalNAc:polypeptide N-acetylgalactosaminyltransferase I (ppGalNAc-T1; residues 40-559). Heteronuclear NMR experiments were performed to assign resonances associated with the two serines (Ser5 and Ser15) and three threonines (Thr6, Thr14, and Thr19) present in the 20-residue long MUC1 repeat. The kinetics and order of addition of GalNAc moieties (Tn antigen) on the MUC1 construct by human ppGalNAc-T1 were subsequently dissected by NMR spectroscopy. Threonine 14 was shown to be rapidly glycosylated by ppGalNAc-T1 with an initial rate of 25 microM/min, followed by Thr6 (8.6 microM/min). The enzyme also modified Ser5 at a slower rate (1.7 microM/min), an event that started only after the glycosylation of Thr14 and Thr6 side chains was mostly completed. Ser15 and Thr19 remained unglycosylated by ppGalNAc-T1. Corresponding O-glycosylation sites within all five tandem repeats were simultaneously modified by ppGalNAc-T1, suggesting that each repeat behaves as an independent substrate unit. This study demonstrated that the hydroxyl oxygens of Thr14 and to a lesser extent Thr 6 represent the two dominant substrates modified by ppGalNAc-T1 within the context of a complex MUC1 peptide substrate. More importantly, the availability of defined isotopically labelled MUC1 glycopeptide substrates and the relative simplicity of their NMR spectra will facilitate the analysis of other transferases within the O-glycosylation pathways and the rational design of tumor-associated MUC1 antigens.  相似文献   

6.
A recombinant mucin O-glycosylation reporter protein, containing 1.7 tandem repeats (TRs) from the transmembrane mucin MUC1, was constructed. The reporter protein, MUC1(1.7TR)-IgG2a, was produced in CHO-K1 cells to study the glycosylation of the MUC1 TR and the in vivo role of polypeptide-GalNAc-T4 glycosyltransferase. N-terminal sequencing of MUC1(1.7TR)-IgG2a showed that all five potential O-glycosylation sites within the TR were used, with an average density of 4.5 glycans per repeat. The least occupied site was Thr in the PDTR motif, where 75% of the molecules were glycosylated, compared to 88-97% at the other sites. This glycan density was confirmed by an alternative liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) based approach. The O-linked oligosaccharides were released from MUC1(1.7TR)-IgG2a and analyzed by nano-LC-MS and LC-MS/MS. Four oligosaccharides were present, NeuAcalpha2-3Galbeta1-3GalNAcol, NeuAcalpha2-3Galbeta1-3(NeuAcalpha2-6)GalNAcol, Galbeta1-3(NeuAcalpha2-6)GalNAcol, and Galbeta1-3GalNAcol, the two first being most abundant. Coexpression of the human polypeptide-GalNAc-T4 transferase with MUC1(1.7TR)-IgG2a increased the glycan occupancy at Thr in PDTR, Ser in VTSA, and Ser in GSTA, supporting the function of GalNAc-T4 proposed from previous in vitro studies. The expression of GalNAc-T4 with a mutation in the first lectin domain (alpha) had no glycosylation effect on PDTR and GSTA but surprisingly gave a dominant negative effect with a decreased glycosylation to around 50% at the Ser in VTSA. The results show that introduction of glycosyltransferases can specifically alter the sites for O-glycosylation in vivo.  相似文献   

7.
Purpose: CD227 (MUC1), a membrane-associated glycoprotein expressed by many types of ductal epithelia, including pancreas, breast, lung, and gastrointestinal tract, is overexpressed and aberrantly glycosylated by malignant cells. We sought to define epitopes on MUC1 recognized by the different cell-mediated immune responses by an in vivo assay. Epitopes identified by this assay were evaluated for efficacy to protect mice transgenic for human MUC1 (MUC1.Tg) against MUC1-expressing tumor growth. Methods: We investigated contributions of the tandem repeat (TR) and the cytoplasmic tail (CT) of MUC1 to the MUC1-specific immunological rejection of tumor cells. MUC1 cDNA constructs, in which the TR region was deleted or the CT was truncated, were transfected into two different murine tumor cell lines (B16 and Panc02), which were used to challenge mice and evaluate immunological rejection of the tumors. We used tumor rejection in vivo to define epitopes on the TR and CT of MUC1 recognized by T cell–mediated immune responses in a preclinical murine model. Results: Our findings demonstrated that the TR and a portion of the MUC1 CT contributed to CD4+ T cell rejection of MUC1-expressing B16 tumor cells, but not rejection of MUC1-expressing Panc02 tumor cells. A separate epitope in the CT of MUC1 was necessary for CD8+ T cell rejection of Panc02 tumor cells. Based on these studies, we sought to evaluate the efficacy of immunizing mice transgenic for (and immunologically tolerant to) human MUC1 with peptides derived from the amino acid sequence of the CT of MUC1. Results showed that survival can be significantly prolonged in vaccinated MUC1.Tg mice challenged with MUC1-expressing tumor cells, without induction of autoimmune responses. Conclusions: These studies demonstrated that MUC1 peptides may be utilized as an effective anticancer immunotherapeutic, and confirmed the importance of immunogenic epitopes outside of the TR.Abbreviations aa Amino acid - CT Cytoplasmic tail - IFN- Interferon gamma - MUC1.Tg MUC1 transgenic mice - TR Tandem repeat - wt Wild-type C57BL/6 mice This work was supported by National Institutes of Health grants CA72712 and CA57362 (M.A.H.), National Institutes of Health training grant CA09476 (K.G.K., A.J.G, and M.L.V.), and fellowship awards from the University of Nebraska Medical Center (to K.G.K. and M.L.V).  相似文献   

8.
The MUC6 mucin was originally isolated from stomach mucus and is one of the major secreted mucins of the digestive tract. A full-length cDNA has not been isolated for this large molecule (greater than 15 kb) and it remains poorly studied. To circumvent the lack of reagents for investigating MUC6, we isolated a cDNA clone from a human fetal pancreatic duct cDNA library that encodes 282 amino acids of the MUC6 tandem repeat. A blast search with the sequence of this cDNA clone showed 90% homology with the original MUC6 (L07517) derived from a human stomach cDNA library and 95% homology both with AK096772, a MUC6-related protein isolated from a human prostate cDNA library and the human genome project clone AC083984. The MUC6 partial cDNA clone isolated from fetal pancreas was inserted into an epitope-tagged MUC1 mucin molecule in place of the native tandem repeat. This chimeric mucin was expressed in human pancreatic (Panc1) and colon (Caco2) carcinoma cell lines and purified for analysis of O-glycosylation by fast atom bombardment mass spectrometry (FAB-MS). The FAB-MS spectra showed O-glycans that had been detected previously on chimeric mucins carrying different tandem repeats, though the spectra for MUC1F/6TR mucins expressed in the Panc1 and Caco2 cells were very different. There was a paucity of O-glycosylation in Panc1 cells in comparison to Caco2 cells where many more structures were evident, and the most abundant glycans in Panc1 cells were sialylated.  相似文献   

9.
Human colon cancers differ in amounts of MUC2 mucin synthesized. However, it is unclear whether MUC2 encodes a single protein. When clones of human colon cancer cells were assayed with antibodies against the TR2 mucin repeat or non-TR2 epitopes, differences in relative expression of MUC2 proteins suggested multiple immunoreactive forms. RT-PCR analysis detected the established 15kbp MUC2 cDNA and a novel form (designated MUC2.1) lacking the MUC2 TR2 repeat. Sequencing of cDNA and genomic DNA indicated that MUC2.1 results from an alternate splice donor. RT-PCR with splice-junction spanning primers confirmed the expression of MUC2.1 mRNA. Anti-MUC2.1 antibody stained colon cancer cells and normal colon in a pattern different from TR2-specific antibody. The presence of MUC2.1 mucin may help us to explain previous conflicting reports that have attempted to correlate the relative abundance of MUC2 protein and/or mRNA with the biological behavior of colon cancer cells.  相似文献   

10.
The cell membrane mucin MUC1 is over-expressed and aberrantly glycosylated in many cancers, and cancer-associated MUC1 glycoforms represent potential targets for immunodiagnostic and therapeutic measures. We have recently shown that MUC1 with GalNAcalpha1-O-Ser/Thr (Tn) and NeuAcalpha2-6GalNAcalpha1-O-Ser/Thr (STn) O-glycosylation is a cancer-specific glycoform, and that Tn/STn-MUC1 glycopeptide-based vaccines can override tolerance in human MUC1 transgenic mice and induce humoral immunity with high specificity for MUC1 cancer-specific glycoforms (Sorensen AL, Reis CA, Tarp MA, Mandel U, Ramachandran K, Sankaranarayanan V, Schwientek T, Graham R, Taylor-Papadimitriou J, Hollingsworth MA, et al. 2006. Chemoenzymatically synthesized multimeric Tn/STn MUC1 glycopeptides elicit cancer-specific anti-MUC1 antibody responses and override tolerance. Glycobiology. 16:96-107). In order to further characterize the immune response to Tn/STn-MUC1 glycoforms, we generated monoclonal antibodies with specificity similar to the polyclonal antibody response found in transgenic mice. In the present study, we define the immunodominant epitope on Tn/STn-MUC1 glycopeptides to the region including the amino acids GSTA of the MUC1 20-amino acid tandem repeat (HGVTSAPDTRPAPGSTAPPA). Most other MUC1 antibodies are directed to the PDTR region, although patients with antibodies to the GSTA region have been identified. A panel of other MUC1 glycoform-specific monoclonal antibodies was included for comparison. The study demonstrates that the GSTA region of the MUC1 tandem repeat contains a highly immunodominant epitope when presented with immature short O-glycans. The cancer-specific expression of this glycopeptide epitope makes it a prime candidate for immunodiagnostic and therapeutic measures.  相似文献   

11.
The membrane-bound mucin-like protein MUC1 with a specified number of tandem repeats has been expressed by transfection of the cDNAs in both the epithelial cell lines MDCK and LLC-PK1, and human lymphoblastoid cell lines T2 and C1R. The structure and glycosylation states of the MUC1 in these four lines were compared with that of the endogenous MUC1 found in the human pancreatic (HPAF) and breast (BT-20) tumor cell lines using flow cytometry and Western blot analysis with anti-MUC1 antibodies, which are either sensitive or insensitive to the glycosylation state of the tandem repeat, and pretreatment of cells with phenyl--galactosaminide, an inhibitor of mucin sialylation. A similar analysis of MUC1 expression in transfected normal and O-glycosylation defective CHO cells reveals that the addition of galactose to the core oligosaccharide structure is apparently responsible for the anomalous difference in Mr between the mature and propeptide forms of the MUC1. Both the tumor cells and the transfected lymphoblastoid cells consistently express significant steady state levels of both the heavily glycosylated mature forms and the poorly glycosylated propeptide forms of the MUC1, whereas MUC1 is found predominantly as the mature extensively glycosylated species in the transfected epithelial cells. Immunofluoresence microscopy of cross sections of the polarized epithelial cells grown on culture filter inserts reveals that the MUC1 is clearly present at the apical surface of the cells, consistent with its expression in normal tissues. Thus, the successful expression of the MUC1 by transfection of either lymphoblastoid cells or epithelial cells yields model systems both for studying the natural structure/function relationships of the protein domains within the MUC1 molecule and for further elucidating the previously reported MHC-independent T-cell recognition of the MUC1.  相似文献   

12.
MUC1, a member of the mucin family of molecules, is a transmembrane glycoprotein abundantly expressed on human ductal epithelial cells and tumors originating from those cells. MUC1 expressed by malignant cells is aberrantly O-glycosylated. Differences in O-glycosylation of the tandem repeat region of MUC1 make tumor and normal forms of this antigen immunologically distinct. The tumor-specific glycoform is, therefore, expected to be a good target for immunotherapy and a good immunogen for generation of antitumor immune responses. We have generated a renewable source of this glycoform by expressing MUC1 cDNA in Sf-9 insect cells using a baculovirus vector. This form of MUC1 (BV-MUC1) is O-glycosylated at a very low level, approximately 0.3% (w/w), and this is not due to the lack of appropriate glycosylotransferases in insect cells. Peptidyl GalNAc-transferases isolated from Sf-9 cells were able to glycosylate in vitro a synthetic MUC1 peptide as efficiently as the transferases isolated from human milk. Neither preparation of peptidyl GalNAc-transferases, however, was able to glycosylate BV-MUC1. This underglycosylated recombinant MUC1 mimics underglycosylated MUC1 on human tumor cells and could serve as an immunogen to stimulate responses that would recognize MUC1 on tumor cells. To test this we immunized mice with Sf-9 cells expressing BV-MUC1. Sera from immunized mice recognized MUC1 on human tumor cells. We also generated MUC1-specific T cells that proliferated in response to synthetic MUC1 peptide.  相似文献   

13.
In adenocarcinomas of the breast and pancreas, underglycosylation of the glycoprotein MUC1, also expressed by normal breast and pancreatic ductal epithelial cells, results in new protein epitopes to which the immune system mounts a cytotoxic T cell response. This cytotoxic immune response is directed primarily against epitopes on the tandem repeat domain of MUC1, and is unconventional in that it is major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-unrestricted. It is therefore necessary to investigate the molecular basis of this immune response in order to enhance and optimize it for immune therapy purposes. In the present study, we characterize new MUC1 transfected human lymphoblastoid cell lines C1R and T2, and a pig kidney epithelial line LLC-PK1, that express MUC1 with either two repeats (MUC1–2R) or 22 repeats (MUC1–22R), and use them as stimulators and targets for cytotoxic T cells (CTL)in vitro. We show that MUC1–2R is processed and glycosylated similarly to MUC1–22R. In contrast to MUC1–22R, MUC1–2R is not recognized by CTL on T2 and C1R cells known for no or low MHC class I expression. It is however recognized when expressed at high density on xenogeneic LLC-PK1 cells. We propose that in MHC-unrestricted recognition, a large number of MUC1 epitopes is necessary to effectively engage the T cell receptor, and that in the presence of a low number of epitopes, engagement of the CD8 co-receptor by MHC class I molecules may be required for completing the signal through the T cell receptor.  相似文献   

14.
MUC1 is a large (>400 kDa), heavily glycosylated transmembrane protein that is aberrantly expressed on greater than 90% of human breast carcinomas and subsequent metastases. The precise function of MUC1 overexpression in tumorigenesis is unknown, although various domains of MUC1 have been implicated in cell adhesion, cell signaling, and immunoregulation. Stimulation of the MDA-MB-468 breast cancer line as well as mouse mammary glands with epidermal growth factor results in the co-immunoprecipitation of MUC1 with a tyrosine-phosphorylated protein of approximately 180 kDa. We have generated transgenic lines overexpressing full-length (MMF), cytoplasmic tail deleted (DeltaCT), or tandem repeat deleted (DeltaTR)-human MUC1 under the control of the mouse mammary tumor virus promoter to further examine the role of MUC1 in signaling and tumorigenesis. Immunoprecipitation experiments revealed that full-length transgenic MUC1 physically associates with all four erbB receptors, and co-localizes with erbB1 in the lactating gland. Furthermore, we detected a sharp increase in ERK1/2 activation in MUC1 transgenic mammary glands compared with Muc1 null and wild-type animals. These results point to a novel function of increased MUC1 expression, potentiation of erbB signaling through the activation of mitogenic MAP kinase pathways.  相似文献   

15.
The tandem repeat of the MUC1 protein core is a major site of O-glycosylation that is catalyzed by several polypeptide GalNAc-transferases. To define structural features of the peptide substrates that contribute to acceptor substrate efficiency, solution structures of the 21-residue peptide AHGVTSAPDTRPAPGSTAPPA (AHG21) from the MUC1 protein core and four isoforms, glycosylated with alpha-N-acetylgalactosamine on corresponding Thr residues, AHG21 (T5), AHG21 (T10), AHG21 (T17), and AHG21 (T5,T17), were investigated by NMR spectroscopy and computational methods. NMR studies revealed that sugar attachment affected the conformational equilibrium of the peptide backbone near the glycosylated Thr residues. The clustering of the low-energy conformations for nonglycosylated and glycosylated counterparts within the VTSA, DTR, and GSTA fragments (including all sites of potential glycosylation catalyzed by GalNAc-T1, -T2, and -T4 transferases) showed that the glycosylated peptides display distinct structural propensities that may explain, in part, the differences in substrate specificities exhibited by these polypeptide GalNAc-transferases.  相似文献   

16.
MUC1 mucin is a large transmembrane glycoprotein whose extracelluler domain is composed of repeating units of a 20 amino acid sequence. In the cancer associated state, this protein expression becomes upregulated and underglycosylated. Previous studies, which show an enhanced binding of a 5-repeat over a 1-repeat MUC1 peptide to a panel of anti-MUC1 antibodies, have led us to investigate the structural and dynamic consequences of increasing repeat number. Two MUC1 peptides were studied: a 16mer corresponding to slightly less than one full repeat of the MUC1 tandem repeat sequence (GVTSAPDTRPAPGSTA) and a 40mer corresponding to two full repeats of the MUC1 sequence (VTSAPDTRPAPGSTAPPAHG)2. Isotopically labeled versions of these MUC1 peptides were cloned, expressed, purified, and evaluated structurally and dynamically using 15N- and 13C-edited NMR approaches. The data show that MUC1 structure, dynamics, and antibody binding affinity are invariant with increasing repeat number. In light of these results, we conclude that the enhanced antibody affinity of the 5-repeat over the 1-repeat MUC1 peptide is due to multivalency effects, and not due to the development of higher order structure in the longer length peptides. The implications of these results are discussed within the context of a multiple repeat MUC1 breast cancer vaccine design.  相似文献   

17.
Transposition of intestinal segments is frequently used for bladder reconstruction. Following transposition, bowel segments continue to produce mucus and a correlation between excessive mucus production and complications such as urinary tract infection or catheter blockage has been observed for a long time. However, no information is currently available on the change of mucin expression and glycosylation under these abnormal conditions. In this study, the variable number tandem repeat region and the irregular repeat domain of human MUC2 were isolated as two glycopeptide populations after reduction and trypsin digestion followed by gel chromatography from urine of patients transposed with urinary bladders. After alkaline borohydride treatment, the oligosaccharides released from the whole MUC2 mucin and the two glycosylated domains were investigated by nanoESI Q-TOF MS/MS (electrospray ionization quadrupole time-of-flight tandem mass spectrometry). More than 60 different glycans were identified, mainly based on sialylated core 3 structures. Some core 1, 2 and 4 oligosaccharides were also found. Most of the structures were acidic with NeuAc residues mainly α2–6 linked to the N-acetylgalactosaminitol and sulphate residues exclusively 3-linked to galactose. No expression of blood group A and B or Sda/Cad determinants was observed. Similar patterns of glycosylation were found in the tandem repeat region and the irregular repeat domain and the level of expression of the major oligosaccharides were in the same order of magnitude. The most interesting feature of this study was that sialyl-Tn antigen, which is considered as a tumour antigen, was the oligosaccharide most highly expressed. This result suggests that mucins from intestinal transposed segments are abnormally glycosylated.  相似文献   

18.
MUC1 is a membrane glycoprotein, which in adenocarninomas is overexpressed and exhibits truncated O‐glycosylation. Overexpression and altered glycosylation make MUC1 into a candidate for immunotherapy. Monoclonal antibodies directed against MUC1 frequently bind an immunodominant epitope that contains a single site for O‐glycosylation. Glycosylation with tumor carbohydrate antigens such as the Tn‐antigen (GalNAc‐O‐Ser/Thr) results in antibodies binding with higher affinity. One proposed model to explain the enhanced affinity of antibodies for the glycosylated antigen is that the addition of a carbohydrate alters the conformational properties, favoring a binding‐competent state. The conformational effects associated with Tn glycosylation of the MUC1 antigen was investigated using solution‐state NMR and molecular dynamics. NMR experiments revealed distinct substructures of the glycosylated MUC1 peptides compared with the unglycosylated peptide. Molecular dynamics simulations of the MUC1 glycopeptide and peptide revealed distinguishing differences in their conformational preferences. Furthermore, the glycopeptide displayed a smaller conformational sampling compared with the peptide, suggesting that the glycopeptide sampled a narrower conformational space and is less dynamic. A comparison of the computed ensemble of conformations assuming random distribution, NMR models, and molecular dynamics simulations indicated that the MUC1 glycopeptide and aglycosylated peptide sampled structurally distinctly ensembles and that these ensembles were different from that of the random coil. Together, these data support the hypothesis that that conformational pre‐selection could be an essential feature of these peptides that dictates the binding affinities to MUC1 specific antibodies.  相似文献   

19.
The site-specific O-glycosylation of MUC1 tandem repeat peptides from secretory mucin of T47D breast cancer cells was analyzed. After affinity isolation on immobilized BC3 antibody, MUC1 was partially deglycosylated by enzymatic treatment with alpha-sialidase/beta-galactosidase and fragmented by proteolytic cleavage with the Arg-C-specific endopeptidase clostripain. The PAP20 glycopeptides were isolated by reversed phase high pressure liquid chromatography and subjected to the structural analyses by quadrupole time-of-flight electrospray ionization mass spectrometry and to the sequencing by Edman degradation. All five positions of the repeat peptide were revealed as O-glycosylation targets in the tumor cell, including the Thr within the DTR motif. The degree of substitution was estimated to average 4.8 glycans per repeat, which compares to 2.6 glycosylated sites per repeat for the mucin from milk (Müller, S., Goletz, S., Packer, N., Gooley, A. A., Lawson, A. M., and Hanisch, F.-G. (1997) J. Biol. Chem. 272, 24780-24793). In addition to a modification by glycosylation, the immunodominant DTR motif on T47D-MUC1 is altered by amino acid replacements (PAPGSTAPAAHGVTSAPESR), which were revealed in about 50% of PAP20 peptides. The high incidence of these replacements and their detection also in other cancer cell lines imply that the conserved tandem repeat domain of MUC1 is polymorphic with respect to the peptide sequence.  相似文献   

20.
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号