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1.
The neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM) is the major substrate for the polysialyltransferases (polySTs), ST8SiaII/STX and ST8SiaIV/PST. The polysialylation of NCAM N-glycans decreases cell adhesion and alters signaling. Previous work demonstrated that the first fibronectin type III repeat (FN1) of NCAM is required for polyST recognition and the polysialylation of the N-glycans on the adjacent Ig5 domain. In this work, we highlight the importance of an FN1 acidic patch in polyST recognition and also reveal that the polySTs are required to interact with sequences in the Ig5 domain for polysialylation to occur. We find that features of the Ig5 domain of the olfactory cell adhesion molecule (OCAM) are responsible for its lack of polysialylation. Specifically, two basic OCAM Ig5 residues (Lys and Arg) found near asparagines equivalent to those carrying the polysialylated N-glycans in NCAM substantially decrease or eliminate polysialylation when used to replace the smaller and more neutral residues (Ser and Asn) in analogous positions in NCAM Ig5. This decrease in polysialylation does not reflect altered glycosylation but instead is correlated with a decrease in polyST-NCAM binding. In addition, inserting non-conserved OCAM sequences into NCAM Ig5, including an “extra” N-glycosylation site, decreases or completely blocks NCAM polysialylation. Taken together, these results indicate that the polySTs not only recognize an acidic patch in the FN1 domain of NCAM but also must contact sequences in the Ig5 domain for polysialylation of Ig5 N-glycans to occur.  相似文献   

2.
Polysialic acid is a developmentally regulated, anti-adhesive polymer that is added to N-glycans on the fifth immunoglobulin domain (Ig5) of the neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM). We found that the first fibronectin type III repeat (FN1) of NCAM is required for the polysialylation of N-glycans on the adjacent Ig5 domain, and we proposed that the polysialyltransferases recognize specific sequences in FN1 to position themselves for Ig5 N-glycan polysialylation. Other studies identified a novel FN1 acidic surface patch and α-helix that play roles in NCAM polysialylation. Here, we characterize the contribution of two additional FN1 sequences, Pro510-Tyr511-Ser512 (PYS) and Gln516-Val517-Gln518 (QVQ). Replacing PYS or the acidic patch dramatically decreases the O-glycan polysialylation of a truncated NCAM protein, and replacing the α-helix or QVQ shifts polysialic acid to FN1 O-glycans in full-length NCAM. We also found that the FN1 domain of the olfactory cell adhesion molecule, a homologous but unpolysialylated protein, could partially replace NCAM FN1. Inserting Pro510-Tyr511 eliminated N-glycan polysialylation and enhanced O-glycosylation of an NCAM- olfactory cell adhesion molecule chimera, and inserting other FN1 sequences unique to NCAM, predominantly the acidic patch, created a new polysialyltransferase recognition site. Taken together, our results highlight the role of the FN1 α-helix and QVQ sequences in N-glycan polysialylation and demonstrate that the acidic patch primarily functions in O-glycan polysialylation.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
Polysialic acid is an anti-adhesive protein modification that promotes cell migration and the plasticity of cell interactions. Because so few proteins carry polysialic acid, we hypothesized that polysialylation is a protein-specific event and that a specific polysialyltransferase-substrate interaction is the basis of this specificity. The major substrate for the polysialyltransferases is the neural cell adhesion molecule, NCAM. Previous work demonstrates that the first fibronectin type III repeat of NCAM (FN1) was necessary for the polysialylation of the N-glycans on the adjacent immunoglobulin domain (Ig5) (Close, B. E., Mendiratta, S. S., Geiger, K. M., Broom, L. J., Ho, L. L., and Colley, K. J. (2003) J. Biol. Chem. 278, 30796-30805). This suggested that FN1 may be a recognition site for the polysialyltransferases. In this study, we showed that the second fibronectin type III repeat (FN2) of NCAM cannot replace FN1. Arg substitution of three unique acidic amino acids on the surface of FN1 eliminated polysialylation not only of a minimal Ig5-FN1 substrate but also of full-length NCAM. Ala substitution of these residues eliminated Ig5-FN1 polysialylation but not that of full-length NCAM, suggesting that the two proteins are interacting differently with the enzymes and that multiple residues are involved in the enzyme-NCAM interaction. By using another truncated protein, Ig5-FN1-FN2, we confirmed the importance of enzyme-substrate positioning for optimal recognition and polysialylation. In sum, we have found that acidic residues on the surface of FN1 are part of a larger protein interaction region that is critical for NCAM recognition and polysialylation by the polysialyltransferases.  相似文献   

5.
Polysialic acid is an anti-adhesive glycan that modifies a select group of mammalian proteins. The primary substrate of the polysialyltransferases (polySTs) is the neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM). Polysialic acid negatively regulates cell adhesion, is required for proper brain development, and is expressed in specific areas of the adult brain where it promotes on-going cell migration and synaptic plasticity. The first fibronectin type III repeat (FN1) of NCAM is required for polysialylation of the N-glycans on the adjacent immunoglobulin-like domain (Ig5), and acidic residues on the surface of FN1 play a role in polyST recognition. Recent work demonstrated that the FN1 domain from the unpolysialylated olfactory cell adhesion molecule (OCAM) was able to partially replace NCAM FN1 (Foley, D. A., Swartzentruber, K. G., Thompson, M. G., Mendiratta, S. S., and Colley, K. J. (2010) J. Biol. Chem. 285, 35056-35067). Here we demonstrate that individually replacing three identical regions shared by NCAM and OCAM FN1, (500)PSSP(503) (PSSP), (526)GGVPI(530) (GGVPI), and (580)NGKG(583) (NGKG), dramatically reduces NCAM polysialylation. In addition, we show that the polyST, ST8SiaIV/PST, specifically binds NCAM and that this binding requires the FN1 domain. Replacing the FN1 PSSP sequences and the acidic patch residues decreases NCAM-polyST binding, whereas replacing the GGVPI and NGKG sequences has no effect. The location of GGVPI and NGKG in loops that flank the Ig5-FN1 linker and the proximity of PSSP to this linker suggest that GGVPI and NGKG sequences may be critical for stabilizing the Ig5-FN1 linker, whereas PSSP may play a dual role maintaining the Ig5-FN1 interface and a polyST recognition site.  相似文献   

6.
Polysialic acid is a developmentally regulated, anti-adhesive glycan that is added to the neural cell adhesion molecule, NCAM. Polysialylated NCAM is critical for brain development and plays roles in synaptic plasticity, axon guidance, and cell migration. The first fibronectin type III repeat of NCAM, FN1, is necessary for the polysialylation of N-glycans on the adjacent immunoglobulin domain. This repeat cannot be replaced by other fibronectin type III repeats. We solved the crystal structure of human NCAM FN1 and found that, in addition to a unique acidic surface patch, it possesses a novel alpha-helix that links strands 4 and 5 of its beta-sandwich structure. Replacement of the alpha-helix did not eliminate polysialyltransferase recognition, but shifted the addition of polysialic acid from the N-glycans modifying the adjacent immunoglobulin domain to O-glycans modifying FN1. Other experiments demonstrated that replacement of residues in the acidic surface patch alter the polysialylation of both N- and O-glycans in the same way, while the alpha-helix is only required for the polysialylation of N-glycans. Our data are consistent with a model in which the FN1 alpha-helix is involved in an Ig5-FN1 interaction that is critical for the correct positioning of Ig5 N-glycans for polysialylation.  相似文献   

7.
Select adhesion molecules connect pre- and postsynaptic membranes and organize developing synapses. The regulation of these trans-synaptic interactions is an important neurobiological question. We have previously shown that the synaptic cell adhesion molecules (SynCAMs) 1 and 2 engage in homo- and heterophilic interactions and bridge the synaptic cleft to induce presynaptic terminals. Here, we demonstrate that site-specific N-glycosylation impacts the structure and function of adhesive SynCAM interactions. Through crystallographic analysis of SynCAM 2, we identified within the adhesive interface of its Ig1 domain an N-glycan on residue Asn60. Structural modeling of the corresponding SynCAM 1 Ig1 domain indicates that its glycosylation sites Asn70/Asn104 flank the binding interface of this domain. Mass spectrometric and mutational studies confirm and characterize the modification of these three sites. These site-specific N-glycans affect SynCAM adhesion yet act in a differential manner. Although glycosylation of SynCAM 2 at Asn60 reduces adhesion, N-glycans at Asn70/Asn104 of SynCAM 1 increase its interactions. The modification of SynCAM 1 with sialic acids contributes to the glycan-dependent strengthening of its binding. Functionally, N-glycosylation promotes the trans-synaptic interactions of SynCAM 1 and is required for synapse induction. These results demonstrate that N-glycosylation of SynCAM proteins differentially affects their binding interface and implicate post-translational modification as a mechanism to regulate trans-synaptic adhesion.  相似文献   

8.
Neuropilin-2 (NRP2) is well known as a co-receptor for class 3 semaphorins and vascular endothelial growth factors, involved in axon guidance and angiogenesis. Moreover, NRP2 was shown to promote chemotactic migration of human monocyte-derived dendritic cells (DCs) toward the chemokine CCL21, a function that relies on the presence of polysialic acid (polySia). In vertebrates, this posttranslational modification is predominantly found on the neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM), where it is synthesized on N-glycans by either of the two polysialyltransferases, ST8SiaII or ST8SiaIV. In contrast to NCAM, little is known on the biosynthesis of polySia on NRP2. Here we identified the polySia attachment sites and demonstrate that NRP2 is recognized only by ST8SiaIV. Although polySia-NRP2 was found on bone marrow-derived DCs from wild-type and St8sia2−/− mice, polySia was completely lost in DCs from St8sia4−/− mice despite normal NRP2 expression. In COS-7 cells, co-expression of NRP2 with ST8SiaIV but not ST8SiaII resulted in the formation of polySia-NRP2, highlighting distinct acceptor specificities of the two polysialyltransferases. Notably, ST8SiaIV synthesized polySia selectively on a NRP2 glycoform that was characterized by the presence of sialylated core 1 and core 2 O-glycans. Based on a comprehensive site-directed mutagenesis study, we localized the polySia attachment sites to an O-glycan cluster located in the linker region between b2 and c domain. Combined alanine exchange of Thr-607, -613, -614, -615, -619, and -624 efficiently blocked polysialylation. Restoration of single sites only partially rescued polysialylation, suggesting that within this cluster, polySia is attached to more than one site.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
Cell adhesion molecules (CAMs) play a crucial role in the formation of the nodes of Ranvier and in the rapid propagation of the nerve impulses along myelinated axons. These CAMs are the targets of autoimmunity in inflammatory neuropathies. We recently showed that a subgroup of patients with aggressive chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy (CIDP) shows autoantibodies to contactin (1). The complex of contactin·Caspr·neurofascin-155 (NF155) enables the formation of paranodal junctions, suggesting that antibody attack against paranodes may participate in the severity of CIDP. In the present study, we mapped the molecular determinants of contactin targeted by the autoantibodies. In three patients, immunoreactivity was directed against the Ig domains of contactin and was dependent on N-glycans. The serum of one patient was selectively directed against contactin bearing mannose-rich N-glycans. Strikingly, the oligomannose type sugars of contactin are required for association with its glial partner NF155 (2). To investigate precisely the role of contactin N-glycans, we have mutated each of the nine consensus N-glycosylation sites independently. We found that the mutation of three sites (N467Q/N473Q/N494Q) in Ig domain 5 of contactin prevented soluble NF155-Fc binding. In contrast, these mutations did not abolish cis-association with Caspr. Next, we showed that the cluster of N-glycosylation sites (Asn-467, Asn-473, and Asn-494) was required for immunoreactivity in one patient. Using cell aggregation assays, we showed that the IgGs from the four CIDP patients prevented adhesive interaction between contactin·Caspr and NF155. Importantly, we showed that the anti-contactin autoantibodies induced alteration of paranodal junctions in myelinated neuronal culture. These results strongly suggest that antibodies to CAMs may be pathogenic and induce demyelination via functional blocking activity.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) entry is mediated by the interaction between a variably glycosylated envelope glycoprotein (gp120) and host-cell receptors. Approximately half of the molecular mass of gp120 is contributed by N-glycans, which serve as potential epitopes and may shield gp120 from immune recognition. The role of gp120 glycans in the host immune response to HIV-1 has not been comprehensively studied at the molecular level. We developed a new approach to characterize cell-specific gp120 glycosylation, the regulation of glycosylation, and the effect of variable glycosylation on antibody reactivity. A model oligomeric gp120 was expressed in different cell types, including cell lines that represent host-infected cells or cells used to produce gp120 for vaccination purposes. N-Glycosylation of gp120 varied, depending on the cell type used for its expression and the metabolic manipulation during expression. The resultant glycosylation included changes in the ratio of high-mannose to complex N-glycans, terminal decoration, and branching. Differential glycosylation of gp120 affected envelope recognition by polyclonal antibodies from the sera of HIV-1-infected subjects. These results indicate that gp120 glycans contribute to antibody reactivity and should be considered in HIV-1 vaccine design.  相似文献   

13.
The cell surface glycoprotein γ-glutamyl transpeptidase (GGT) was isolated from healthy human kidney and liver to characterize its glycosylation in normal human tissue in vivo. GGT is expressed by a single cell type in the kidney. The spectrum of N-glycans released from kidney GGT constituted a subset of the N-glycans identified from renal membrane glycoproteins. Recent advances in mass spectrometry enabled us to identify the microheterogeneity and relative abundance of glycans on specific glycopeptides and revealed a broader spectrum of glycans than was observed among glycans enzymatically released from isolated GGT. A total of 36 glycan compositions, with 40 unique structures, were identified by site-specific glycan analysis. Up to 15 different glycans were observed at a single site, with site-specific variation in glycan composition. N-Glycans released from liver membrane glycoproteins included many glycans also identified in the kidney. However, analysis of hepatic GGT glycopeptides revealed 11 glycan compositions, with 12 unique structures, none of which were observed on kidney GGT. No variation in glycosylation was observed among multiple kidney and liver donors. Two glycosylation sites on renal GGT were modified exclusively by neutral glycans. In silico modeling of GGT predicts that these two glycans are located in clefts on the surface of the protein facing the cell membrane, and their synthesis may be subject to steric constraints. This is the first analysis at the level of individual glycopeptides of a human glycoprotein produced by two different tissues in vivo and provides novel insights into tissue-specific and site-specific glycosylation in normal human tissues.  相似文献   

14.
Corin is a membrane-bound protease essential for activating natriuretic peptides and regulating blood pressure. Human corin has 19 predicted N-glycosylation sites in its extracellular domains. It has been shown that N-glycans are required for corin cell surface expression and zymogen activation. It remains unknown, however, how N-glycans at different sites may regulate corin biosynthesis and processing. In this study, we examined corin mutants, in which each of the 19 predicted N-glycosylation sites was mutated individually. By Western analysis of corin proteins in cell lysate and conditioned medium from transfected HEK293 cells and HL-1 cardiomyocytes, we found that N-glycosylation at Asn-80 inhibited corin shedding in the juxtamembrane domain. Similarly, N-glycosylation at Asn-231 protected corin from autocleavage in the frizzled-1 domain. Moreover, N-glycosylation at Asn-697 in the scavenger receptor domain and at Asn-1022 in the protease domain is important for corin cell surface targeting and zymogen activation. We also found that the location of the N-glycosylation site in the protease domain was not critical. N-Glycosylation at Asn-1022 may be switched to different sites to promote corin zymogen activation. Together, our results show that N-glycans at different sites may play distinct roles in regulating the cell membrane targeting, zymogen activation, and ectodomain shedding of corin.  相似文献   

15.
Identifying biological roles for mammalian glycans and the pathways by which they are synthesized has been greatly facilitated by investigations of glycosylation mutants of cultured cell lines and model organisms. Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) glycosylation mutants isolated on the basis of their lectin resistance have been particularly useful for glycosylation engineering of recombinant glycoproteins. To further enhance the application of these mutants, and to obtain insights into the effects of altering one specific glycosyltransferase or glycosylation activity on the overall expression of cellular glycans, an analysis of the N-glycans and major O-glycans of a panel of CHO mutants was performed using glycomic analyses anchored by matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight/time of flight mass spectrometry. We report here the complement of the major N-glycans and O-glycans present in nine distinct CHO glycosylation mutants. Parent CHO cells grown in monolayer versus suspension culture had similar profiles of N- and O-GalNAc glycans, although the profiles of glycosylation mutants Lec1, Lec2, Lec3.2.8.1, Lec4, LEC10, LEC11, LEC12, Lec13, and LEC30 were consistent with available genetic and biochemical data. However, the complexity of the range of N-glycans observed was unexpected. Several of the complex N-glycan profiles contained structures of m/z ∼13,000 representing complex N-glycans with a total of 26 N-acetyllactosamine (Galβ1–4GlcNAc)n units. Importantly, the LEC11, LEC12, and LEC30 CHO mutants exhibited unique complements of fucosylated complex N-glycans terminating in Lewisx and sialyl-Lewisx determinants. This analysis reveals the larger-than-expected complexity of N-glycans in CHO cell mutants that may be used in a broad variety of functional glycomics studies and for making recombinant glycoproteins.  相似文献   

16.
Mammalian sperm acquire fertility through a functional maturation process called capacitation, where sperm membrane molecules are drastically remodeled. In this study, we found that a wheat germ agglutinin (WGA)-reactive protein on lipid rafts, named WGA16, is removed from the sperm surface on capacitation. WGA16 is a prostate-derived seminal plasma protein that has never been reported and is deposited on the sperm surface in the male reproductive tract. Based on protein and cDNA sequences for purified WGA16, it is a homologue of human zymogen granule protein 16 (ZG16) belonging to the Jacalin-related lectin (JRL) family in crystal and primary structures. A glycan array shows that WGA16 binds heparin through a basic patch containing Lys-53/Lys-73 residues but not the conventional lectin domain of the JRL family. WGA16 is glycosylated, contrary to other ZG16 members, and comparative mass spectrometry clearly shows its unique N-glycosylation profile among seminal plasma proteins. It has exposed GlcNAc and GalNAc residues without additional Gal residues. The GlcNAc/GalNAc residues can work as binding ligands for a sperm surface galactosyltransferase, which actually galactosylates WGA16 in situ in the presence of UDP-Gal. Interestingly, surface removal of WGA16 is experimentally induced by either UDP-Gal or heparin. In the crystal structure, N-glycosylated sites and a potential heparin-binding site face opposite sides. This geography of two functional sites suggest that WGA16 is deposited on the sperm surface through interaction between its N-glycans and the surface galactosyltransferase, whereas its heparin-binding domain may be involved in binding to sulfated glycosaminoglycans in the female tract, enabling removal of WGA16 from the sperm surface.  相似文献   

17.
The 300-kDa cation-independent mannose 6-phosphate receptor (CI-MPR), which contains multiple mannose 6-phosphate (Man-6-P) binding sites that map to domains 3, 5, and 9 within its 15-domain extracytoplasmic region, functions as an efficient carrier of Man-6-P-containing lysosomal enzymes. To determine the types of phosphorylated N-glycans recognized by each of the three carbohydrate binding sites of the CI-MPR, a phosphorylated glycan microarray was probed with truncated forms of the CI-MPR. Surface plasmon resonance analyses using lysosomal enzymes with defined N-glycans were performed to evaluate whether multiple domains are needed to form a stable, high affinity carbohydrate binding pocket. Like domain 3, adjacent domains increase the affinity of domain 5 for phosphomannosyl residues, with domain 5 exhibiting ∼60-fold higher affinity for lysosomal enzymes containing the phosphodiester Man-P-GlcNAc when in the context of a construct encoding domains 5–9. In contrast, domain 9 does not require additional domains for high affinity binding. The three sites differ in their glycan specificity, with only domain 5 being capable of recognizing Man-P-GlcNAc. In addition, domain 9, unlike domains 1–3, interacts with Man8GlcNAc2 and Man9GlcNAc2 oligosaccharides containing a single phosphomonoester. Together, these data indicate that the assembly of three unique carbohydrate binding sites allows the CI-MPR to interact with the structurally diverse phosphorylated N-glycans it encounters on newly synthesized lysosomal enzymes.  相似文献   

18.
gp130 is a ubiquitously expressed glycoprotein and signal transducer of interleukin 6 family of cytokines. It has been reported that gp130 has 11 potential N-glycosylation sites in the extracellular domain, and nine of them are actually N-glycosylated. However, the structure and functional role of the carbohydrate chains carried by gp130 are totally unknown. In this study, we examined the functional role of N-glycans of gp130 in mouse neuroepithelial cells. In neuroepithelial cells treated with tunicamycin, an N-glycosylation inhibitor, unglycosylated form of gp130 was detected. The unglycosylated gp130 was not phosphorylated in response to leukemia inhibitory factor stimulation. Although the unglycosylated gp130 was found to be expressed on the cell surface, it could not form a heterodimer with leukemia inhibitory factor receptor. These results suggest that N-glycans are required for the activation, but not for the localization, of gp130 in neuroepithelial cells.  相似文献   

19.
Defects in N-glycosylation and N-glycan processing frequently cause alterations in plant cell wall architecture, including changes in the structure of cellulose, which is the most abundant plant polysaccharide. KORRIGAN1 (KOR1) is a glycoprotein enzyme with an essential function during cellulose biosynthesis in Arabidopsis thaliana. KOR1 is a membrane-anchored endo-β1,4-glucanase and contains eight potential N-glycosylation sites in its extracellular domain. Here, we expressed A. thaliana KOR1 as a soluble, enzymatically active protein in insect cells and analyzed its N-glycosylation state. Structural analysis revealed that all eight potential N-glycosylation sites are utilized. Individual elimination of evolutionarily conserved N-glycosylation sites did not abolish proper KOR1 folding, but mutations of Asn-216, Asn-324, Asn-345, and Asn-567 resulted in considerably lower enzymatic activity. In contrast, production of wild-type KOR1 in the presence of the class I α-mannosidase inhibitor kifunensine, which abolished the conversion of KOR1 N-glycans into complex structures, did not affect the activity of the enzyme. To address N-glycosylation site occupancy and N-glycan composition of KOR1 under more natural conditions, we expressed a chimeric KOR1-Fc-GFP fusion protein in leaves of Nicotiana benthamiana. Although Asn-108 and Asn-133 carried oligomannosidic N-linked oligosaccharides, the six other glycosylation sites were modified with complex N-glycans. Interestingly, the partially functional KOR1 G429R mutant encoded by the A. thaliana rsw2-1 allele displayed only oligomannosidic structures when expressed in N. benthamiana, indicating its retention in the endoplasmic reticulum. In summary, our data indicate that utilization of several N-glycosylation sites is important for KOR1 activity, whereas the structure of the attached N-glycans is not critical.  相似文献   

20.
GABAA receptors, the major mediators of fast inhibitory neuronal transmission, are heteropentameric glycoproteins assembled from a panel of subunits, usually including α and β subunits with or without a γ2 subunit. The α1β2γ2 receptor is the most abundant GABAA receptor in brain. Co-expression of γ2 with α1 and β2 subunits causes conformational changes, increases GABAA receptor channel conductance, and prolongs channel open times. We reported previously that glycosylation of the three β2 subunit glycosylation sites, N32, N104 and N173, was important for α1β2 receptor channel gating. Here, we examined the hypothesis that steric effects or conformational changes caused by γ2 subunit co-expression alter the glycosylation of partnering β2 subunits. We found that co-expression of γ2 subunits hindered processing of β2 subunit N104 N-glycans in HEK293T cells. This γ2 subunit-dependent effect was strong enough that a decrease of γ2 subunit expression in heterozygous GABRG2 knockout (γ2+/?) mice led to appreciable changes in the endoglycosidase H digestion pattern of neuronal β2 subunits. Interestingly, as measured by flow cytometry, γ2 subunit surface levels were decreased by mutating each of the β2 subunit glycosylation sites. The β2 subunit mutation N104Q also decreased GABA potency to evoke macroscopic currents and reduced conductance, mean open time and open probability of single channel currents. Collectively, our data suggested that γ2 subunits interacted with β2 subunit N-glycans and/or subdomains containing the glycosylation sites, and that γ2 subunit co-expression-dependent alterations in the processing of the β2 subunit N104 N-glycans were involved in altering the function of surface GABAA receptors.  相似文献   

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