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1.
Recently, complex O-glycosylation of the cytoplasmic/nuclear protein Skp1 has been characterized in the eukaryotic microorganism Dictyostelium. Skp1's glycosylation is mediated by the sequential action of a prolyl hydroxylase and five conventional sugar nucleotide-dependent glycosyltransferase activities that reside in the cytoplasm rather than the secretory compartment. The Skp1-HyPro GlcNAcTransferase, which adds the first sugar, appears to be related to a lineage of enzymes that originated in the prokaryotic cytoplasm and initiates mucin-type O-linked glycosylation in the lumen of the eukaryotic Golgi apparatus. GlcNAc is extended by a bifunctional glycosyltransferase that mediates the ordered addition of beta1,3-linked Gal and alpha1,2-linked Fuc. The architecture of this enzyme resembles that of certain two-domain prokaryotic glycosyltransferases. The catalytic domains are related to those of a large family of prokaryotic and eukaryotic, cytoplasmic, membrane-bound, inverting glycosyltransferases that modify glycolipids and polysaccharides prior to their translocation across membranes toward the secretory pathway or the cell exterior. The existence of these enzymes in the eukaryotic cytoplasm away from membranes and their ability to modify protein acceptors expose a new set of cytoplasmic and nuclear proteins to potential prolyl hydroxylation and complex O-linked glycosylation.  相似文献   

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Skp1 is a cytoplasmic and nuclear protein of eukaryotes best known as an adaptor in SCF ubiquitin-protein isopeptide ligases. In Dictyostelium, Skp1 is subject to 4-hydroxylation at Pro(143) and subsequent O-glycosylation by alpha-linked GlcNAc and other sugars. Soluble cytosolic extracts have Skp1 prolyl 4-hydroxylase (P4H) activity, which can be measured based on hydroxylation-dependent transfer of [(3)H]GlcNAc to recombinant Skp1 by recombinant (Skp1-protein)-hydroxyproline alpha-N-acetyl-d-glucosaminyltransferase. The Dictyostelium Skp1 P4H gene (phyA) was predicted using a bioinformatics approach, and the expected enzyme activity was confirmed by expression of phyA cDNA in Escherichia coli. The purified recombinant enzyme (P4H1) was dependent on physiological concentrations of O(2), alpha-ketoglutarate, and ascorbate and was inhibited by CoCl(2), 3,4-dihydroxybenzoate, and 3,4-dihydroxyphenyl acetate, as observed for known animal cytoplasmic P4Hs of the hypoxia-inducible factor-alpha (HIFalpha) class. Overexpression of phyA cDNA in Dictyostelium yielded increased enzyme activity in a soluble cytosolic extract. Disruption of the phyA locus by homologous recombination resulted in loss of detectable activity in extracts and blocked hydroxylation-dependent glycosylation of Skp1 based on molecular weight analysis by SDS-PAGE, demonstrating a requirement for P4H1 in vivo. The sequence and functional similarities of P4H1 to animal HIFalpha-type P4Hs suggest that hydroxylation of Skp1 may, like that of animal HIFalpha, be regulated by availability of O(2), alpha-ketoglutarate, and ascorbate, which might exert novel control over Skp1 glycosylation.  相似文献   

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Skp1 is a ubiquitous eukaryotic protein found in several cytoplasmic and nuclear protein complexes, including the SCF-type E3 ubiquitin ligase. In Dictyostelium, Skp1 is hydroxylated at proline 143, which is then modified by a pentasaccharide chain. The enzyme activity that attaches the first sugar, GlcNAc, was previously shown to copurify with the GnT51 polypeptide whose gene has now been cloned using a proteomics approach based on a quadrupole/time-of-flight hybrid mass spectrometer. When expressed in Escherichia coli, recombinant GnT51 exhibits UDP-GlcNAc:hydroxyproline Skp1 GlcNAc-transferase activity. Based on amino acid sequence alignments, GnT51 defines a new family of microbial polypeptide glycosyltransferases that appear to be distantly related to the catalytic domain of mucin-type UDP-GalNAc:Ser/Thr polypeptide alpha-GalNAc-transferases expressed in the Golgi compartment of animal cells. This relationship is supported by the effects of site-directed mutagenesis of GnT51 amino acids associated with its predicted DXD-like motif, DAH. In contrast, GnT51 lacks the N-terminal signal anchor sequence present in the Golgi enzymes, consistent with the cytoplasmic localization of the Skp1 acceptor substrate and the biochemical properties of the enzyme. The first glycosylation step of Dictyostelium Skp1 is concluded to be mechanistically similar to that of animal mucin type O-linked glycosylation, except that it occurs in the cytoplasm rather than the Golgi compartment of the cell.  相似文献   

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The accumulation and localization of four developmentally regulated membrane glycoproteins were examined in a glycosylation mutant of the cellular slime mold Dictyostelium discoideum. As judged by immunoblot procedures using antipeptide antibodies, the levels of three of the glycoproteins, WGA80B, SP29A, and SP29B, were unaffected, but their apparent molecular masses were reduced by 14,000, 3,500 and 3,500 daltons, respectively. The level of the fourth glycoprotein, gp80, was reduced to below detectable limits. The reduced molecular sizes were apparently due to the absence of certain carbohydrate structures as judged by labeling Western blots with anti-carbohydrate antibodies and a lectin. Using immunofluorescence labeling of permeabilized and intact cells, the localization of WGA80B, SP29A, and SP29B, in intracellular vesicles and on the cell surface of prespore cells, was observed to be unaffected in the mutant cells. The developmentally regulated oligosaccharide structure(s) affected by the modB locus does not influence the subcellular localization and accumulation of these three glycoproteins in the prespore cells of this phylogenetically primitive organism.  相似文献   

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The subcellular plurilocalization of some lectins (galectin-1, galectin-3, galectin-10, calreticulin, etc.) is an intriguing problem, implying different partners according to their localization, and involvement in a variety of cellular activities. For example, the well-known lectin, galectin-3, a lactose-binding protein, can act inside the nucleus in splicing events, and at the plasma membrane in adhesion, and it was demonstrated that galectin-3 interacts in the cytoplasm with Bcl-2, an antiapoptotic protein. Some years ago, our group isolated a nuclear lectin CBP70, capable of recognizing N-acetylglucosamine residues. This lectin, first isolated from the nucleus of HL60 cells, was also localized in the cytoplasm. It has been demonstrated that CBP70 is a glycosylated lectin, with different types of glycosylation, comparing cytoplasmic and nuclear forms. In this article, we have studied the localization of CBP70 in undifferentiated HL60 cells by electron microscopy, immunofluorescence analysis, and subcellular fractionation. The results obtained clearly demonstrated that CBP70 is a plurilocalized lectin that is found in the nucleus, at the endoplasmic reticulum, the Golgi apparatus, and mitochondria, but not at the plasma membrane. Because CBP70, a nuclear glycoprotein, was found to be associated also with the endoplasmic reticulum and the Golgi apparatus where the glycosylation take place, it raised the question: where does the glycosylation of nuclear proteins occur?  相似文献   

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Far1 is a bifunctional protein that is required to arrest the cell cycle and establish cell polarity during yeast mating. Here we show that SCF(Cdc4) ubiquitylates Far1 in the nucleus, which in turn targets the multi-ubiquitylated protein to 26S proteasomes most likely located at the nuclear envelope. In response to mating pheromones, a fraction of Far1 was stabilized after its export into the cytoplasm by Ste21/Msn5. Preventing nuclear export destabilized Far1, while conversely cytoplasmic Far1 was stabilized, although the protein was efficiently phosphorylated in a Cdc28-Cln-dependent manner. The core SCF subunits Cdc53, Hrt1 and Skp1 were distributed in the nucleus and the cytoplasm, whereas the F-box protein Cdc4 was exclusively nuclear. A cytoplasmic form of Cdc4 was unable to complement the growth defect of cdc4-1 cells, but it was sufficient to degrade Far1 in the cytoplasm. Our results illustrate the importance of subcellular localization of F-box proteins, and provide an example of how an extracellular signal regulates protein stability at the level of substrate localization.  相似文献   

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The Drosophila HIFα homologue, Sima, is localized mainly in the cytoplasm in normoxia and accumulates in the nucleus upon hypoxic exposure. We have characterized the mechanism governing Sima oxygen-dependent subcellular localization and found that Sima shuttles continuously between the nucleus and the cytoplasm. We have previously shown that nuclear import depends on an atypical bipartite nuclear localization signal mapping next to the C-terminus of the protein. We show here that nuclear export is mediated in part by a CRM1-dependent nuclear export signal localized in the oxygen-dependent degradation domain (ODDD). CRM1-dependent nuclear export requires both oxygen-dependent hydroxylation of a specific prolyl residue (Pro850) in the ODDD, and the activity of the von Hippel Lindau tumor suppressor factor. At high oxygen tension rapid nuclear export of Sima occurs, whereas in hypoxia, Sima nuclear export is largely inhibited. HIFα/Sima nucleo-cytoplasmic localization is the result of a dynamic equilibrium between nuclear import and nuclear export, and nuclear export is modulated by oxygen tension.  相似文献   

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Skp1 is an adaptor-like protein in E3(SCF)-ubiquitin ligases and other multiprotein complexes of the cytoplasm and nucleus. In Dictyostelium, Skp1 is modified by an unusual pentasaccharide containing a Galalpha1-Fuc linkage, whose formation is examined here. A cytosolic extract from Dictyostelium was found to yield, after 2400-fold purification, an activity that could transfer Gal from UDP-Gal to both a Fuc-terminated glycoform of Skp1 and synthetic Fuc conjugates in the presence of Mn(2+) and dithiothreitol. The microsomal fraction was devoid of activity. The linkage formed was Galalpha1,3Fuc based on co-chromatography with only this synthetic isomer conjugate, and sensitivity to alpha1,3/6-galactosidase. Skp1 exhibited an almost 1000-fold lower K(m) and 35-fold higher V(max) compared with a simple alpha-fucoside, but this advantage was abolished by denaturation or alkylation of Cys residues. A comparison of a complete series of synthetic glycosides representing the non-reducing terminal mono-, di-, and trisaccharides of Skp1 revealed, surprisingly, that the disaccharide is most active owing primarily to a V(max) advantage, but still much less active than Skp1 itself because of a K(m) difference. These findings indicate that alpha-GalT1 is a cytoplasmic enzyme whose modification of Skp1 requires proper presentation of the terminal acceptor disaccharide by a folded Skp1 polypeptide, which correlates with previous evidence that the Galalpha1,3Fuc linkage is deficient in expressed mutant Skp1 proteins.  相似文献   

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Skp1 is a nucleocytoplasmic protein that is post-translationally modified by a pentasaccharide, Gal alpha1,Gal alpha1,3Fuc alpha1,2Gal-beta1,3GlcNAc alpha1O-, at a 4-hydroxylated derivative of Pro-143 in the amebazoan Dictyostelium discoideum. An enzymatic activity that catalyzes formation of the Gal alpha1,3Fuc linkage by transfer of Gal from UDP-alphaGal to Fuc alpha1,2Gal beta1,3GlcNAc alpha1O-benzyl, or the corresponding glycoform of Skp1, was described previously in cytosolic extracts of Dictyostelium. A protein GT78 associated with this activity has been purified to chromatographic homogeneity. In-gel tryptic digestion followed by nano-liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry on a quadrupole time-of-flight geometry instrument with data-dependent tandem mass spectrometry acquisition yielded a number of peptide fragmentation spectra, nine of which were manually de novo sequenced and found to map onto a predicted 3-exon gene of unknown function on chromosome 4. GT78 is predicted to comprise 648 amino acids with an N-terminal glycosyltransferase and a C-terminal beta-propeller domain. Overexpression of GT78 with a His6-tag resulted in a 120-fold increase in GalT-activity in cytosolic extracts, and purified His6-GT78 exhibited alpha3GalT-activity toward a synthetic acceptor substrate. Expression of the truncated N-terminal region confirmed the predicted catalytic activity of this domain. Disruption of the GT78 gene led to a loss of enzyme activity in extracts and accumulation of the non-galactosylated isoform of Skp1 in cells. GT78 therefore represents the Skp1 alpha3GalT, and its mechanism conforms to the sequential model of Skp1 glycosylation in the cytoplasm shown for earlier enzymes in the pathway. Informatics studies suggest that related catalytic domains are expressed in the Golgi or cytoplasm of plants, other protozoans, and animals.  相似文献   

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Skp1 is a subunit of the SCF-E3 ubiquitin ligase that targets cell cycle and other regulatory factors for degradation. In Dictyostelium, Skp1 is modified by a pentasaccharide containing the type 1 blood group H trisaccharide at its core. To address how the third sugar, fucose alpha1,2-linked to galactose, is attached, a proteomics strategy was applied to determine the primary structure of FT85, previously shown to copurify with the GDP-Fuc:Skp1 alpha 1,2-fucosyltransferase. Tryptic-generated peptides of FT85 were sequenced de novo using Q-TOF tandem mass spectrometry. Degenerate primers were used to amplify FT85 genomic DNA, which was further extended by a novel linker polymerase chain reaction method to yield an intronless open reading frame of 768 amino acids. Disruption of the FT85 gene by homologous recombination resulted in viable cells, which had altered light scattering properties as revealed by flow cytometry. FT85 was necessary and sufficient for Skp1 fucosylation, based on biochemical analysis of FT85 mutant cells and Escherichia coli that express FT85 recombinantly. FT85 lacks sequence motifs that characterize all other known alpha 1,2-fucosyltransferases and lacks the signal-anchor sequence that targets them to the secretory pathway. The C-terminal region of FT85 harbors motifs found in inverting Family 2 glycosyltransferase domains, and its expression in FT85 mutant cells restores fucosyltransferase activity toward a simple disaccharide substrate. Whereas most prokaryote and eukaryote Family 2 glycosyltransferases are membrane-bound and oriented toward the cytoplasm where they glycosylate lipid-linked or polysaccharide precursors prior to membrane translocation, the soluble, eukaryotic Skp1-fucosyltransferase modifies a protein that resides in the cytoplasm and nucleus.  相似文献   

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Adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) is a tumour suppressor involved in colon cancer progression. We and others previously described nuclear-cytoplasmic shuttling of APC. However, there are conflicting reports concerning the localization of endogenous wild-type and tumour-associated, truncated APC. To resolve this issue, we compared APC localization using immunofluorescence (IF) microscopy and cell fractionation with nine different APC antibodies. We found that three commonly used APC antibodies showed nonspecific nuclear staining by IF and validated this conclusion in cells where APC was inactivated using small interfering RNA or Cre/Flox. Fractionation showed that wild-type and truncated APC from colon cancer cells were primarily cytoplasmic, but increased in the nucleus after leptomycin B treatment, consistent with CRM1-dependent nuclear export. In contrast to recent reports, our biochemical data indicate that APC nuclear localization is not regulated by changes in cell density, and that APC nuclear export is not prevented by truncating mutations in cancer. These results verify that the bulk of APC resides in the cytoplasm and indicate the need for caution when evaluating the nuclear accumulation of APC.  相似文献   

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Toxoplasma gondii is a protist parasite of warm-blooded animals that causes disease by proliferating intracellularly in muscle and the central nervous system. Previous studies showed that a prolyl 4-hydroxylase related to animal HIFα prolyl hydroxylases is required for optimal parasite proliferation, especially at low O2. We also observed that Pro-154 of Skp1, a subunit of the Skp1/Cullin-1/F-box protein (SCF)-class of E3-ubiquitin ligases, is a natural substrate of this enzyme. In an unrelated protist, Dictyostelium discoideum, Skp1 hydroxyproline is modified by five sugars via the action of three glycosyltransferases, Gnt1, PgtA, and AgtA, which are required for optimal O2-dependent development. We show here that TgSkp1 hydroxyproline is modified by a similar pentasaccharide, based on mass spectrometry, and that assembly of the first three sugars is dependent on Toxoplasma homologs of Gnt1 and PgtA. Reconstitution of the glycosyltransferase reactions in extracts with radioactive sugar nucleotide substrates and appropriate Skp1 glycoforms, followed by chromatographic analysis of acid hydrolysates of the reaction products, confirmed the predicted sugar identities as GlcNAc, Gal, and Fuc. Disruptions of gnt1 or pgtA resulted in decreased parasite growth. Off target effects were excluded based on restoration of the normal glycan chain and growth upon genetic complementation. By analogy to Dictyostelium Skp1, the mechanism may involve regulation of assembly of the SCF complex. Understanding the mechanism of Toxoplasma Skp1 glycosylation is expected to help develop it as a drug target for control of the pathogen, as the glycosyltransferases are absent from mammalian hosts.  相似文献   

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Skp1 is a subunit of the Skp1 cullin-1 F-box protein (SCF) family of E3 ubiquitin ligases and of other regulatory complexes in the cytoplasm and nucleus. In Dictyostelium, Skp1 is modified by a pentasaccharide with the type I blood group H antigen (Fucalpha1,2Galbeta1,3GlcNAc-) at its core. Addition of the Fuc is catalyzed by FT85, a 768-amino acid protein whose fucosyltransferase activity maps to the C-terminal half of the protein. A strain whose FT85 gene is interrupted by a genetic insertion produces a truncated, GlcNAc-terminated glycan on Skp1, suggesting that FT85 may also have beta-galactosyltransferase activity. In support of this model, highly purified native and recombinant FT85 are each able to galactosylate Skp1 from FT85 mutant cells. Site-directed mutagenesis of predicted key amino acids in the N-terminal region of FT85 abolishes Skp1 beta-galactosyltransferase activity with minimal effects on the fucosyltransferase. In addition, a recombinant form of the N-terminal region exhibits beta-galactosyltransferase but not fucosyltransferase activity. Kinetic analysis of FT85 suggests that its two glycosyltransferase activities normally modify Skp1 processively but can have partial function individually. In conclusion, FT85 is a bifunctional diglycosyltransferase that appears to be designed to efficiently extend the Skp1 glycan in vivo.  相似文献   

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