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1.
Polysialylation of the neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM) is thought to play a critical role in neural development. Two polysialyltransferases, ST8Sia II and ST8Sia IV, play dominant roles in polysialic acid synthesis on NCAM. However, the individual roles and mechanisms by which these two enzymes form large amounts of polysialic acid on NCAM were heretofore unknown. Previous studies indicate that ST8Sia IV forms more highly polysialylated N-glycans on NCAM than ST8Sia II in vitro. In the present study, we first demonstrated that a combination of ST8Sia II and ST8Sia IV cooperatively polysialylated NCAM, resulting in NCAM N-glycans containing more, and thus longer, polysialic acid than when the enzymes were used individually. There was also an increase in polysialylated NCAM when we used ST8Sia II and ST8Sia IV sequentially, whereas there appeared to be a subtle increase when the enzymes were used in the reverse order. Furthermore, ST8Sia IV was able to add polysialic acid to oligosialylated oligosaccharides and unpolysialylated antennas in N-glycans attached to NCAM, even when polysialic acid was attached to at least one of the other antennas. By contrast, ST8Sia II added little polysialic acid to the same acceptors. On the other hand, neither ST8Sia II nor ST8Sia IV could add polysialic acid to a polysialylated antenna of NCAM N-glycans. These combined results indicate that the synergistic effect of ST8Sia II and ST8Sia IV is caused by: 1) the ability of ST8Sia IV to add polysialic acid to oligosialic acid formed by ST8Sia II, 2) the potential of ST8Sia IV to act on more antennas of N-glycans than ST8Sia II, and 3) the ability of ST8Sia II and ST8Sia IV in combination to act on the fifth and sixth N-glycosylation sites of NCAM.  相似文献   

2.
A limited number of mammalian proteins are modified by polysialic acid, with the neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM) being the most abundant of these. We hypothesize that polysialylation is a protein-specific glycosylation event and that an initial protein-protein interaction between polysialyltransferases and glycoprotein substrates mediates this specificity. To evaluate the regions of NCAM required for recognition and polysialylation by PST/ST8Sia IV and STX/ST8Sia II, a series of domain deletion proteins were generated, co-expressed with each enzyme, and their polysialylation analyzed. A protein consisting of the fifth immunoglobulin-like domain (Ig5), which contains the reported sites of polysialylation, and the first fibronectin type III repeat (FN1) was polysialylated by both enzymes, whereas a protein consisting of Ig5 alone was not polysialylated by either enzyme. This demonstrates that the Ig5 domain of NCAM and FN1 are sufficient for polysialylation, and suggests that the FN1 may constitute an enzyme recognition and docking site. Two other NCAM mutants, NCAM-6 (Ig1-5) and NCAM-7 (FN1-FN2), were weakly polysialylated by PST/ST8Sia IV, suggesting that a weaker enzyme recognition site may exist within the Ig domains, and that glycans in the FN region are polysialylated. Further analysis indicated that O-linked oligosaccharides in NCAM-7, and O-linked and N-linked glycans in full-length NCAM, are polysialylated when these proteins are co-expressed with the polysialyltransferases in COS-1 cells. Our data support a model in which the polysialyltransferases bind to the FN1 of NCAM to polymerize polysialic acid chains on appropriately presented glycans in adjacent regions.  相似文献   

3.
The presence of alpha2,8-linked polysialic acid on the neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM) is known to modulate cell interactions during development and oncogenesis. Two enzymes, the alpha2,8-polysialyltransferases ST8Sia IV()/PST and ST8Sia II()/STX are responsible for the polysialylation of NCAM. We previously reported that both ST8Sia IV/PST and ST8Sia II/STX enzymes are themselves modified by alpha2,8-linked polysialic acid chains, a process called autopolysialylation. In the case of ST8Sia IV/PST, autopolysialylation is not required for enzymatic activity. However, whether the autopolysialylation of ST8Sia II/STX is required for its ability to polysialylate NCAM is unknown. To understand how autopolysialylation impacts ST8Sia II/STX enzymatic activity, we employed a mutagenesis approach. We found that ST8Sia II/STX is modified by six Asn-linked oligosaccharides and that polysialic acid is distributed among the oligosaccharides modifying Asn 89, 219, and 234. Coexpression of a nonautopolysialylated ST8Sia II/STX mutant with NCAM demonstrated that autopolysialylation is not required for ST8Sia II/STX polysialyltransferase activity. In addition, catalytically active, nonautopolysialylated ST8Sia II/STX does not polysialylate any endogenous COS-1 cell proteins, highlighting the protein specificity of polysialylation. Furthermore, immunoblot analysis of NCAM polysialylation by autopolysialylated and nonautopolysialylated ST8Sia II/STX suggests that the NCAM is polysialylated to a higher degree by autopolysialylated ST8Sia II/STX. Therefore, we conclude that autopolysialylation of ST8Sia II/STX, like that of ST8Sia IV/PST, is not required for, but does enhance, NCAM polysialylation.  相似文献   

4.
Polysialic acid, a homopolymer of alpha2,8-linked sialic acid expressed on the neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM), is thought to play critical roles in neural development. Two highly homologous polysialyltransferases, ST8Sia II and ST8Sia IV, which belong to the sialyltransferase gene family, synthesize polysialic acid on NCAM. By contrast, ST8Sia III, which is moderately homologous to ST8Sia II and ST8Sia IV, adds oligosialic acid to itself but very inefficiently to NCAM. Here, we report domains of polysialyltransferases required for NCAM recognition and polysialylation by generating chimeric enzymes between ST8Sia IV and ST8Sia III or ST8Sia II. We first determined the catalytic domain of ST8Sia IV by deletion mutants. To identify domains responsible for NCAM polysialylation, different segments of the ST8Sia IV catalytic domain, identified by the deletion experiments, were replaced with corresponding segments of ST8Sia II and ST8Sia III. We found that larger polysialic acid was formed on the enzymes themselves (autopolysialylation) when chimeric enzymes contained the carboxyl-terminal region of ST8Sia IV. However, chimeric enzymes that contain only the carboxyl-terminal segment of ST8Sia IV and the amino-terminal segment of ST8Sia III showed very weak activity toward NCAM, even though they had strong activity in polysialylating themselves. In fact, chimeric enzymes containing the amino-terminal portion of ST8Sia IV fused to downstream sequences of ST8Sia III inhibited NCAM polysialylation in vitro, although they did not polysialylate NCAM. These results suggest that in polysialyltransferases the NCAM recognition domain is distinct from the polysialylation domain and that some chimeric enzymes may act as a dominant negative enzyme for NCAM polysialylation.  相似文献   

5.
Polysialylated neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM) is thought to play a critical role in neural development. Polysialylation of NCAM was shown to be achieved by two alpha2,8-polysialyltransferases, ST8Sia IV (PST) and ST8Sia II (STX), which are moderately related to another alpha2,8-sialyltransferase, ST8Sia III. Here we describe that all three alpha2,8-sialyltransferases can utilize oligosaccharides as acceptors but differ in the efficiency of adding polysialic acid on NCAM. First, we found that ST8Sia III can form polysialic acid on the enzyme itself (autopolysialylation) but not on NCAM. These discoveries prompted us to determine if ST8Sia IV and ST8Sia II share the property of ST8Sia III in utilizing low molecular weight oligosaccharides as acceptors. By using a newly established method, we found that ST8Sia IV, ST8Sia II, and ST8Sia III all add oligosialic and polysialic acid on various sialylated N-acetyllactosaminyl oligosaccharides, including NCAM N-glycans, fetuin N-glycans, synthetic sialylated N-acetyllactosamines, and on alpha(2)-HS-glycoprotein. Our results also showed that monosialyl and disialyl N-acetyllactosamines can serve equally as an acceptor, suggesting that no initial addition of alpha2,8-sialic acid is necessary for the action of polysialyltransferases. Polysialylation of NCAM by ST8Sia IV and ST8Sia II is much more efficient than polysialylation of N-glycans isolated from NCAM. Moreover, ST8Sia IV and ST8Sia II catalyze polysialylation of NCAM much more efficiently than ST8Sia III. These results suggest that no specific acceptor recognition is involved in polysialylation of low molecular weight sialylated oligosaccharides, whereas the enzymes exhibit pronounced acceptor specificities if glycoproteins are used as acceptors.  相似文献   

6.
NCAM polysialylation plays a critical role in neuronal development and regeneration. Polysialylation of the neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM) is catalyzed by two polysialyltransferases, ST8Sia II (STX) and ST8Sia IV (PST), which contain sialylmotifs L and S conserved in all members of the sialyltransferases. The members of the ST8Sia gene family, including ST8Sia II and ST8Sia IV are unique in having three cysteines in sialylmotif L, one cysteine in sialylmotif S, and one cysteine at the COOH terminus. However, structural information, including how disulfide bonds are formed, has not been determined for any of the sialyltransferases. To obtain insight into the structure/function of ST8Sia IV, we expressed human ST8Sia IV in insect cells, Trichoplusia ni, and found that the enzyme produced in the insect cells catalyzes NCAM polysialylation, although it cannot polysialylate itself ("autopolysialylation"). We also found that ST8Sia IV does not form a dimer through disulfide bonds. By using the same enzyme preparation and performing mass spectrometric analysis, we found that the first cysteine in sialylmotif L and the cysteine in sialylmotif S form a disulfide bridge, whereas the second cysteine in sialylmotif L and the cysteine at the COOH terminus form a second disulfide bridge. Site-directed mutagenesis demonstrated that mutation at cysteine residues involved in the disulfide bridges completely inactivated the enzyme. Moreover, changes in the position of the COOH-terminal cysteine abolished its activity. By contrast, the addition of green fluorescence protein at the COOH terminus of ST8Sia IV did not render the enzyme inactive. These results combined indicate that the sterical structure formed by intramolecular disulfide bonds, which bring the sialylmotifs and the COOH terminus within close proximity, is critical for the catalytic activity of ST8Sia IV.  相似文献   

7.
The neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM) has different isoforms due to different sizes in its polypeptide and plays a significant role in neural development. In neural development, the function of NCAM is modified by polysialylation catalyzed by two polysialyltransferases, ST8Sia II and ST8Sia IV. Previously, it was reported by others that ST8Sia II polysialylates only transmembrane isoforms of the NCAM, such as NCAM-140 and NCAM-180, but not NCAM-120 and NCAM-125 anchored by a glycosylphosphotidylinositol. In the present study, we first discovered that ST8Sia II polysialylates all isoforms of the NCAM examined, and we demonstrated that polysialylation of NCAM expressed on 3T3 cells facilitates neurite outgrowth regardless of isoforms of NCAM, where polysialic acid is attached. We then show that neurite outgrowth is significantly facilitated only when polysialylated NCAM is present in cell membranes. Moreover, the soluble NCAM coated on plates did not have an effect on neurite outgrowth exerted by soluble L1 adhesion molecule coated on plates. These results, taken together, indicate that ST8Sia II plays critical roles in modulating the function of all major isoforms of NCAM. The results also support previous studies showing that a signal cascade initiated by NCAM differs from that initiated by L1 molecule.  相似文献   

8.
Abstract: Polysialic acid on the neural cell adhesion molecule is developmentally regulated and has been implicated in the plasticity of cell-cell interactions. The sialyltransferases ST8Sia II and ST8Sia IV are able to catalyze the synthesis of polysialic acid. This study compares the expression of ST8Sia II and ST8Sia IV mRNA during postnatal rat brain development. Northern blot analysis indicated a substantial down-regulation of ST8Sia II from high expression at postnatal day 2 to almost undetectable levels at the age of 6 months. In contrast, the decline of ST8Sia IV content was moderate. In the mature brain, ST8Sia IV is the predominant polysialyltransferase. In situ hybridization of selected brain regions at postnatal days 2, 11, and 21 confirmed the decline of ST8Sia II level in isocortex, hippocampus, and cerebellum. ST8Sia II was not detectable at any time point in the subependymal layer and the layers of the olfactory bulb. Persistent ST8Sia IV expression was localized in the subependymal layer, the glomerular layer of the olfactory bulb, and the granule cell layer of the dentate gyrus and in some widely dispersed cells of the isocortex. The distinct expression patterns of ST8Sia II and ST8Sia IV suggest their differential regulation. As discussed with regard to the persistent polysialic acid expression, ST8Sia IV should receive particular attention in the mature brain.  相似文献   

9.
Polysialic acid (polySia) is a unique and highly regulated posttranslational modification of the neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM). The presence of polySia affects NCAM-dependent cell adhesion and plays an important role during brain development, neural regeneration and plastic processes including learning and memory. Polysialylated NCAM is expressed on several neuroendocrine tumors of high malignancy and correlates with poor prognosis. Two closely related enzymes, the polysialyltransferases ST8SiaII and ST8SiaIV, catalyze the biosynthesis of polySia. However, the impact of each enzyme in NCAM polysialylation is not understood. Here, we describe the selective cell-based in vitro inhibition of ST8SiaII using synthetic sialic acid precursors. We provide evidence for different substrate affinities of ST8SiaII and ST8SiaIV. These data open the possibility to study the individual role of the two enzymes during various aspects of brain development and function and in tumorigenesis.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Sialic acid (Sia) is expressed as terminal sugar in many glycoconjugates and plays an important role during development and regeneration. Addition of homopolymers of Sia (polysialic acid; polySia/PSA) is a unique and highly regulated post-translational modification of the neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM). The presence of polySia affects NCAM-dependent cell adhesion and plays an important role during brain development, neural regeneration, and plastic processes including learning and memory. PolySia-NCAM is expressed on several neuroendocrine tumors of high malignancy and correlates with poor prognosis. Two closely related enzymes, the polysialyltransferases ST8SiaII and ST8SiaIV, catalyze the biosynthesis of polySia. This review summarizes recent knowledge on Sia biosynthesis and the correlation between Sia biosynthesis and polysialylation of NCAM and report on approaches to modify the degree of polySia on NCAM in vitro and in vivo. First, we describe the inhibition of polysialylation of NCAM in ST8SiaII-expressing cells using synthetic Sia precursors. Second, we demonstrate that the key enzyme of the Sia biosynthesis (UDP-N-acetylglucosamine 2-epimerase/N-acetylmannosamine kinase) regulates and limits the synthesis of polySia by controlling the cellular Sia concentration.  相似文献   

12.
The post-translational modification of the neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM) by polysialic acid (polySia) represents a remarkable example of dynamic modulation of homo- and heterophilic cell interactions by glycosylation. The synthesis of this unique carbohydrate polymer depends on the polysialyltransferases ST8SiaII and ST8SiaIV. Aiming to understand in more detail the contributions of ST8SiaII and ST8SiaIV to polySia biosynthesis in vivo, we used mutant mouse lines that differ in the number of functional polysialyltransferase alleles. The 1,2-diamino-4,5-methylenedioxybenzene method was used to qualitatively and quantitatively assess the polySia patterns. Similar to the wild-type genotype, long polySia chains (>50 residues) were detected in all genotypes expressing at least one functional polysialyltransferase allele. However, variant allelic combinations resulted in distinct alterations in the total amount of poly-Sia; the relative abundance of long, medium, and short polymers; and the ratio of polysialylated to non-polysialylated NCAM. In ST8SiaII-null mice, 45% of the brain NCAM was non-polysialylated, whereas a single functional allele of ST8SiaII was sufficient to polysialylate approximately 90% of the NCAM pool. Our data reveal a complex polysialylation pattern and show that, under in vivo conditions, the coordinated action of ST8SiaII and ST8SiaIV is crucial to fine-tune the amount and structure of polySia on NCAM.  相似文献   

13.
Angata K  Fukuda M 《Biochimie》2003,85(1-2):195-206
Polysialic acid is a unique carbohydrate composed of a linear homopolymer of alpha2,8-linked sialic acid, and is mainly attached to the fifth immunoglobulin-like domain of the neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM) via a typical N-linked glycan in vertebrate neural system. Polysialic acid plays critical roles in neural development by modulating adhesive property of NCAM such as neural cell migration, neurite outgrowth, neural pathfinding, and synaptogenesis. The expression of polysialic acid is temporally and spatially regulated during neural development. Polysialylation of NCAM is catalyzed by two polysialyltransferases, ST8Sia II (STX) and ST8Sia IV (PST), which belong to the family of six genes encoding alpha 2,8-sialyltransferases. ST8Sia II and IV are expressed differentially in tissue-specific and cell-specific manners, and they apparently have distinct roles in development and organogenesis. The presence of polysialic acid is always associated with expression of ST8Sia II and/or IV, suggesting that ST8Sia II and IV are the key enzymes that control the expression of polysialic acid. Both ST8Sia II and IV can transfer multiple alpha 2,8-linked sialic acid residues to an acceptor N-glycan containing a NeuNAc alpha 2-->3 (or 6) Gal beta 1-->4GlcNAc beta 1-->R structure without participation of other enzymes. The two enzymes differently but cooperatively act on NCAM and the amount of polysialic acid synthesized by both enzymes together is greater than that synthesized by either enzyme alone. The polysialyltransferases are thus important regulators in polysialic acid synthesis and contribute to neural development in the vertebrate.  相似文献   

14.
Polysialic acid (polySia), an alpha2,8-linked polymer of N-acetylneuraminic acid, represents an essential regulator of neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM) functions. Two polysialyltransferases, ST8SiaII and ST8SiaIV, account for polySia synthesis, but their individual roles in vivo are still not fully understood. Previous in vitro studies defined differences between the two enzymes in their usage of the two NCAM N-glycosylation sites affected and suggested a synergistic effect. Using mutant mice, lacking either enzyme, we now assessed in vivo the contribution of ST8SiaII and ST8SiaIV to polysialylation of NCAM. PolySia-NCAM was isolated from mouse brains and trypsinized, and polysialylated glycopeptides as well as glycans were analyzed in detail. Our results revealed an identical glycosylation and almost complete polysialylation of N-glycosylation sites 5 and 6 in polySia-NCAM irrespective of the enzyme present. The same sets of glycans were substituted by identical numbers of polySia chains in vivo, the length distribution of which, however, differed with the enzyme setting. Expression of ST8SiaIV alone led to higher amounts of short polySia chains and gradual decrease with length, whereas exclusive action of ST8SiaII evoked a slight reduction in long polySia chains only. These variations were most pronounced at N-glycosylation site 5, whereas the polysialylation pattern at N-glycosylation site 6 did not differ between NCAM from wild-type and ST8SiaII- or ST8SiaIV-deficient mice. Thus, our fine structure analyses suggest a comparable quality of polysialylation by ST8SiaII and ST8SiaIV and a distinct synergistic action of the two enzymes in the synthesis of long polySia chains at N-glycosylation site 5 in vivo.  相似文献   

15.
Abstract: A comparative study was undertaken to correlate the immunohistochemical localization of polysialic acid (PSA) and the in situ localization of ST8Sia II mRNA. In situ hybridization of postnatal day 3 mouse brain showed high levels of ST8Sia II mRNA expression in the cerebral neocortex, striatum, hippocampus, subiculum, medial habenular nucleus, thalamus, pontine nuclei, and inferior colliculus; intermediate-level expression in the olfactory bulb, hypothalamus, superior colliculus, and cerebellum; and low-level expression in other regions. The distribution of ST8Sia II mRNA in the neocortex and cerebellum coincided with the immunohistochemical localization of PSA. During brain development, ST8Sia II mRNA started decreasing and had almost disappeared by postnatal day 14. Comparison between ST8Sia II and IV mRNA expression was also undertaken by northern blot analysis and competitive PCR analysis. During the late embryonic to early postnatal stages of the mouse CNS, the ST8Sia II mRNA showed abundant mRNA expression compared with the ST8Sia IV mRNA. Competitive PCR analysis of the adult mouse CNS showed weak expression of the two genes in the olfactory bulb, thalamus, hippocampus, and eyes. The regional and transient expression of ST8Sia II mRNA coincides with that of PSA, suggesting that ST8Sia II is closely involved in the biosynthesis and expression of PSA in the developing mouse CNS.  相似文献   

16.
The polysialyltransferases ST8Sia II and ST8Sia IV polysialylate the glycans of a small subset of mammalian proteins. Their most abundant substrate is the neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM). An acidic surface patch and a novel α-helix in the first fibronectin type III repeat of NCAM are required for the polysialylation of N-glycans on the adjacent immunoglobulin domain. Inspection of ST8Sia IV sequences revealed two conserved polybasic regions that might interact with the NCAM acidic patch or the growing polysialic acid chain. One is the previously identified polysialyltransferase domain (Nakata, D., Zhang, L., and Troy, F. A. (2006) Glycoconj. J. 23, 423–436). The second is a 35-amino acid polybasic region that contains seven basic residues and is equidistant from the large sialyl motif in both polysialyltransferases. We replaced these basic residues to evaluate their role in enzyme autopolysialylation and NCAM-specific polysialylation. We found that replacement of Arg276/Arg277 or Arg265 in the polysialyltransferase domain of ST8Sia IV decreased both NCAM polysialylation and autopolysialylation in parallel, suggesting that these residues are important for catalytic activity. In contrast, replacing Arg82/Arg93 in ST8Sia IV with alanine substantially decreased NCAM-specific polysialylation while only partially impacting autopolysialylation, suggesting that these residues may be particularly important for NCAM polysialylation. Two conserved negatively charged residues, Glu92 and Asp94, surround Arg93. Replacement of these residues with alanine largely inactivated ST8Sia IV, whereas reversing these residues enhanced enzyme autopolysialylation but significantly reduced NCAM polysialylation. In sum, we have identified selected amino acids in this conserved polysialyltransferase polybasic region that are critical for the protein-specific polysialylation of NCAM.Polysialic acid is a linear homopolymer of α2,8-linked sialic acid that is added to a small subset of mammalian glycoproteins by the polysialyltransferases (polySTs)3 ST8Sia II (STX) and ST8Sia IV (PST) (14). Substrates for the polySTs include the neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM) (5, 6), the α-subunit of the voltage-dependent sodium channel (7, 8), CD36, a scavenger receptor found in milk (9), neuropilin-2 expressed by dendritic cells (10), and the polySTs themselves, which can polysialylate their own N-glycans in a process called autopolysialylation (11, 12). This small number of polysialylated proteins and other evidence from our laboratory (1315) suggest that polysialylation is a protein-specific modification that requires an initial protein-protein interaction between the polySTs and their glycoprotein substrates.The most abundant polysialylated protein is NCAM. The three major NCAM isoforms consist of five Ig domains, two fibronectin type III repeats, and a transmembrane domain and cytoplasmic tail (NCAM140 and NCAM180) or a glycosylphosphatidylinositol anchor (NCAM120) (16). Polysialylation takes place primarily on two N-linked glycans in the Ig5 domain (17). We have previously shown that a truncated NCAM140 protein consisting of Ig5, the first fibronectin type III repeat (FN1), the transmembrane region, and cytoplasmic tail is fully polysialylated (13). However, a protein consisting of Ig5, the transmembrane region, and cytoplasmic tail is not polysialylated (13). This suggests that the polySTs recognize and bind the FN1 domain to polysialylate N-glycans on the adjacent Ig5 domain. We subsequently identified an acidic patch unique to NCAM FN1, consisting of Asp497, Asp511, Glu512, and Glu514 (15).4 When three of these residues (Asp511, Glu512, and Glu514) are mutated to alanine or arginine, NCAM polysialylation is reduced or abolished, suggesting that the acidic patch is part of a larger recognition region. We anticipate that within this putative recognition region there will be amino acids required for mediating polyST-NCAM binding, and those that do not mediate binding per se but instead are required for correct positioning of the enzyme-substrate complex for polysialylation. For example, we have identified a novel α-helix in the FN1 domain that when replaced leads to polysialylation of O-glycans found on the FN1 domain rather than N-glycans on the Ig5 domain (14). This helix may mediate an interdomain interaction that positions the Ig5 N-glycans for polysialylation by an enzyme bound to the FN1 domain (14). Alternatively, the helix could act as a secondary interaction site that positions the polyST properly on the substrate.The expression of the polySTs is developmentally regulated with high levels of STX and moderate levels of PST expressed throughout the developing embryo (2, 18, 19). STX levels decline after birth, although PST expression persists in specific regions of the adult brain where polysialylated NCAM is involved in neuronal regeneration and synaptic plasticity (1823). The large size and negative charge of polysialic acid disrupt NCAM-dependent and NCAM-independent interactions, thereby negatively modulating cell adhesion (2426). Simultaneous disruption of both PST and STX in mice results in severe neuronal defects and death usually within 4 weeks after birth (27). Interestingly, when NCAM expression is also eliminated in these mice, they have a nearly normal phenotype, suggesting the main function of polysialic acid is to modulate NCAM-mediated cell adhesion during development (27). In addition, re-expression of highly polysialylated NCAM has been associated with several cancers, including neuroblastomas, gliomas, small cell lung carcinomas, and Wilms tumor. The presence of polysialic acid is thought to promote cancer cell growth and invasiveness (2835).Sialyltransferases, including the polySTs, have three motifs required for catalytic activity (3638) (see Fig. 1A). Sialyl motif Large (SML) is thought to bind the donor substrate CMP-sialic acid (39), whereas sialyl motif Small (SMS) is believed to bind both donor and carbohydrate acceptor substrates (40). The sialyl motif Very Small (SMVS) has a conserved His residue that is required for catalytic activity (38, 41). However, the precise function of this motif is unknown. An additional 4-amino acid motif, motif III, is conserved in the sialyltransferases (4244). It was suggested that this motif, and particularly His and Tyr residues within its sequence, may be required for optimal activity and acceptor recognition (42).Open in a separate windowFIGURE 1.PST and STX polybasic regions and mutants generated for this study. A, representation of the polySTs and their polybasic regions and sialyl motifs. The PBR is a 35-amino acid region present in both PST and STX, equidistant from the SML of each enzyme and rich in conserved positively charged amino acids. The PSTD is a region identified by Nakata et al. (47) that is 32 amino acids in length, rich in basic residues, and contiguous with the SMS of the enzymes. The sialyl motifs (SML, SMS, SMVS, and motif III) are regions of homology found in all sialyltransferases that are believed to be involved in substrate and donor interactions. B, PSTD of PST and the mutants made in this region that are used in this study. C, PBR of PST and STX and the mutants made in this region that are used in this study.Angata et al. (45) used chimeric enzymes to identify regions within the polySTs required for catalytic activity and NCAM polysialylation. Sequences from PST, STX, and ST8Sia III were used to construct the chimeric proteins. ST8Sia III is an α2,8-sialyltransferase that typically adds one or two sialic acid residues to glycoprotein or glycolipid substrates, can autopolysialylate its own glycans, but cannot polysialylate NCAM (46). Deletion analysis showed that amino acids 62–356 are required for PST catalytic activity. Replacement of segments of this region with corresponding STX or ST8Sia III sequences led to the suggestion that amino acids 62–127 and possibly 194–267 of PST may be required for NCAM recognition (45).Recently, Troy and co-workers (47, 48) identified a stretch of basic residues, termed the polysialyltransferase domain (PSTD), which is only observed in the two polySTs and not in other sialyltransferases. The PSTD is contiguous with SMS and extends from amino acids 246–277 in PST and 261–292 in STX. Mutation analysis demonstrated that the overall positive charge of this motif is important for activity and identified specific residues required for NCAM polysialylation (Arg252, Ile275, Lys276, and Arg277) (47).In this study, we have scanned the critical polyST regions identified by the work of Angata et al. (45) for sequences that may be involved in protein-protein recognition and NCAM polysialylation. We identified a second polybasic motif that we named the polybasic region (PBR). The PBR is conserved in PST and STX and is located equidistant from the SML of each enzyme. It consists of 35 amino acids of which 7 are the basic amino acids Arg and Lys. We found that the replacement of two specific residues within the PBR (Arg82 and Arg93 of PST and Arg97 and Lys108 of STX) have a greater negative effect on NCAM polysialylation than on autopolysialylation. Replacement of acidic residues surrounding PST Arg93 led to a similar disparate effect on these processes. Comparison of the critical residues in both the PSTD and PBR demonstrated that the replacement of PSTD residues had an equally negative impact on both NCAM polysialylation and enzyme autopolysialylation, whereas replacement of selected PBR residues more severely impacted NCAM polysialylation, suggesting that the PBR residues may play important roles in NCAM-specific polysialylation.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Alpha2,8-linked polysialic acid (polySia) is a structurally unique antiadhesive glycotope that covalently modifies N-linked glycans on neural cell adhesion molecules (N-CAMs). These sugar chains play a key role in modulating cell-cell interactions, principally during embryonic development, neural plasticity, and tumor metastasis. The degree of polymerization (DP) of polySia chains on N-CAM is postulated to be of critical importance in regulating N-CAM function. There are limitations, however, in the conventional methods to accurately determine the DP of polySia on N-CAM, the most serious being partial acid hydrolysis of internal alpha2,8-ketosidic linkages that occur during fluorescent derivatization, a step necessary to enhance chromatographic detection. To circumvent this problem, we have developed a facile method that combines the use of Endo-beta-galactosidase to first release linear polySia chains from N-CAM, with high resolution high pressure liquid chromatography profiling. This strategy avoids acid hydrolysis prior to chromatographic profiling and thus provides an accurate determination of the DP and distribution of polySia on N-CAM. The potential of this new method was evaluated using a nonpolysialylated construct of N-CAM that was polysialylated in vitro using a soluble construct of ST8Sia II or ST8Sia IV. Whereas most of the oligosialic acid/polySia chains consisted of DPs approximately 50-60 or less, a subpopulation of chains with DPs approximately 150 to approximately 180 and extending to DP approximately 400 were detected. The DP of this subpopulation is considerably greater than reported previously for N-CAM. Endo-beta-galactosidase can also release polySia chains from polysialylated membranes expressed in the neuroblastoma cell line, Neuro2A, and native N-CAM from embryonic chick brains.  相似文献   

19.
Polysialic acid on the neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM) modulates cell-cell adhesion and signaling, is required for proper brain development, and plays roles in neuronal regeneration and the growth and invasiveness of tumor cells. Evidence indicates that NCAM polysialylation is highly protein-specific, requiring an initial polysialyltransferase-NCAM protein-protein interaction. Previous work suggested that a polybasic region located prior to the conserved polysialyltransferase catalytic motifs may be involved in NCAM recognition, but not overall enzyme activity (Foley, D. A., Swartzentruber, K. G., and Colley, K. J. (2009) J. Biol. Chem. 284, 15505-15516). Here, we employ a competition assay to evaluate the role of this region in substrate recognition. We find that truncated, catalytically inactive ST8SiaIV/PST proteins that include the polybasic region, but not those that lack this region, compete with endogenous ST8SiaIV/PST and reduce NCAM polysialylation in SW2 small cell lung carcinoma cells. Replacing two polybasic region residues, Arg(82) and Arg(93), eliminates the ability of a full-length, catalytically inactive enzyme (PST H331K) to compete with SW2 cell ST8SiaIV/PST and block NCAM polysialylation. Replacing these residues singly or together in ST8SiaIV/PST substantially reduces or eliminates NCAM polysialylation, respectively. In contrast, replacing Arg(82), but not Arg(93), substantially reduces the ability of ST8SiaIV/PST to polysialylate neuropilin-2 and SynCAM 1, suggesting that Arg(82) plays a general role in substrate recognition, whereas Arg(93) specifically functions in NCAM recognition. Taken together, our results indicate that the ST8SiaIV/PST polybasic region plays a critical role in substrate recognition and suggest that different combinations of basic residues may mediate the recognition of distinct substrates.  相似文献   

20.
To determine the molecular basis of eukaryotic polysialylation, the function of a structurally unique polybasic motif of 32 amino acids (pI∼12) in the polysialyltransferases (polySTs), ST8Sia II (STX and ST8Sia IV (PST) was investigated. This motif, designated the “polysialyltransferase domain” (PSTD), is immediately upstream of the sialylmotif S (SM-S). PolyST activity was lost in COS-1 mutants in which the entire PSTD in ST8Sia IV was deleted, or in mutants in which 10 and 15 amino acids in either the N- or C- terminus of PSTD were deleted. Site-directed mutagenesis showed that Ile275, Lys276 and Arg277 in the C-terminus of PSTD in ST8Sia IV, which is contiguous with the N-terminus of sialylmotif-S, were essential for polysialylation. Arg252 in the N-terminus segment of the PSTD was also required, as was the overall positive charge. Thus, multiple domains in the polySTs can influence their activity. Immunofluorescent microscopy showed that the mutated proteins were folded correctly, based on their Golgi localization. The structural distinctness of the conserved PSTD in the polySTs, and its absence in the mono- oligoSTs, suggests that it is a “polymerization domain” that distinguishes a polyST from a monosialyltransferases. We postulate that the electrostatic interaction between the polybasic PSTD and the polyanionic polySia chains may function to tether nascent polySia chains to the enzyme, thus facilitating the processive addition of new Sia residues to the non-reducing end of the growing chain. In accord with this hypothesis, the polyanion heparin was shown to inhibit recombinant human ST8Sia II and ST8Sia IV at 10 μM.  相似文献   

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