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1.
Mucin-type O-linked glycosylation is a common post translational modification of cell-surface and secretory pathway proteins and is implicated in vital biological processes as well as human disease. We report here the use of the metabolic chemical reporter GalNAz along with Cu(I)-catalyzed [3+2] azide-alkyne cycloaddition conditions for the robust, in-gel fluorescent visualization of mucin-type O-linked glycoproteins.  相似文献   

2.
The family of UDP-GalNAc:polypeptide N-acetylgalactosaminyltransferases (ppGaNTases) is responsible for initiating mucin-type O-linked glycosylation in higher eukaryotes. To begin to examine the biological role of O-linked glycosylation, mammalian cells were treated with a small molecule inhibitor (designated 1-68A, Ref. 15) of ppGaNTase activity. NIH3T3 cells exposed to the inhibitor were shown to undergo a significant reduction in cell surface O-glycosylation as detected by staining with jacalin and peanut agglutinin lectins after 30 min of treatment; no reduction in staining using antibodies to O-linked N-acetylglucosamine or the lectin concanavalin A was detected. Apoptosis was also observed in treated cells after 45 min of exposure, ostensibly following the O-glycosylation reduction. Overexpression of several different ppGaNTase isoforms restored cell surface O-glycosylation and rescued inhibitor-induced apoptosis. Additionally, mouse embryonic mandibular organ cultures exposed to 1-68A developed abnormally, presumably because of epithelial and mesenchymal apoptosis that followed a reduction in jacalin and peanut agglutinin staining. Our studies suggest that mucin-type O-linked glycosylation may be required for normal development and that ppGaNTases may play a role in the regulation of apoptosis.  相似文献   

3.
O-linked glycosylation is a post-translational and post-folding event involving exposed S/T residues at beta-turns or in regions with extended conformation. O-linked sites are difficult to predict from sequence analyses compared to N-linked sites. Here we compare the results of chemical analyses of isolated glycopeptides with the prediction using the neural network prediction method NetOGlyc3.1, a procedure that has been reported to correctly predict 76% of O-glycosylated residues in proteins. Using the heavily glycosylated human insulin receptor as the test protein six sites of mucin-type O-glycosylation were found at residues T744, T749, S757, S758, T759, and T763 compared to the three sites (T759 and T763- correctly, T756- incorrectly) predicted by the neural network method. These six sites occur in a 20 residue segment that begins nine residues downstream from the start of the insulin receptor beta-chain. This region which also includes N-linked glycosylation sites at N742 and N755, is predicted to lack secondary structure and is followed by residues 765-770, the known linear epitope for the monoclonal antibody 18-44.  相似文献   

4.
Mucin-type O-linked glycoproteins are known for regulating many aspects of cell activity but remains a challenge to detect under physiological conditions which is due to the diversity of O-glycosylation and the lack of universal method. Here a direct labeling strategy for in situ visualizing of mucin-type O-linked glycoproteins on living cells has been developed. The strategy utilizes the combination of metabolic engineering and chemical probing technologies. Treating cells with an unnatural sugar, 2-keto Ac(4)GalNAc analogue (2-keto isostere of GalNAc) to generate keto groups upon cells, followed by chemoselective ligation of keto groups on cells with a fluorescent tag, fluorescein-5-thiosemicarbazide (FTSC), provides a promising platform to probing mucin-type O-glycosylation on living cells. The FTSC conjugates illustrated very similar fluorescent spectra as FITC, a fluorescent tag widely used in proteomics, indicating good compatibility with commonly used fluorescent equipments. The established method eliminated the need of an additional fluorescent amplification step. Cells after being treated with the method maintained a rather high level of viability of 84.3?%. Finally, the assay has been successfully applied to image the expression of mucin-type O-linked glycoproteins within CHO and HeLa cells.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
Glycosylation of proteins is an essential process in all eukaryotes and a great diversity in types of protein glycosylation exists in animals, plants and microorganisms. Mucin-type O-glycosylation, consisting of glycans attached via O-linked N-acetylgalactosamine (GalNAc) to serine and threonine residues, is one of the most abundant forms of protein glycosylation in animals. Although most protein glycosylation is controlled by one or two genes encoding the enzymes responsible for the initiation of glycosylation, i.e. the step where the first glycan is attached to the relevant amino acid residue in the protein, mucin-type O-glycosylation is controlled by a large family of up to 20 homologous genes encoding UDP-GalNAc:polypeptide GalNAc-transferases (GalNAc-Ts) (EC 2.4.1.41). Therefore, mucin-type O-glycosylation has the greatest potential for differential regulation in cells and tissues. The GalNAc-T family is the largest glycosyltransferase enzyme family covering a single known glycosidic linkage and it is highly conserved throughout animal evolution, although absent in bacteria, yeast and plants. Emerging studies have shown that the large number of genes (GALNTs) in the GalNAc-T family do not provide full functional redundancy and single GalNAc-T genes have been shown to be important in both animals and human. Here, we present an overview of the GalNAc-T gene family in animals and propose a classification of the genes into subfamilies, which appear to be conserved in evolution structurally as well as functionally.  相似文献   

7.
Cell-cell and cell-matrix adhesion are crucial during many stages of eukaryotic development. Here, we provide the first example that mucin-type O-linked glycosylation is involved in a developmentally regulated cell adhesion event in Drosophila melanogaster. Mutations in one member of the evolutionarily conserved family of enzymes that initiates O-linked glycosylation alter epithelial cell adhesion in the Drosophila wing blade. A transposon insertion mutation in pgant3 or RNA interference to pgant3 resulted in blistered wings, a phenotype characteristic of genes involved in integrin-mediated cell interactions. Expression of wild type pgant3 in the mutant background rescued the wing blistering phenotype, whereas expression of another family member (pgant35A) did not, revealing a unique requirement for pgant3. pgant3 mutants displayed reduced O-glycosylation along the basal surface of larval wing imaginal discs, which was restored with wild type pgant3 expression, suggesting that reduced glycosylation of basal proteins is responsible for disruption of adhesion in the adult wing blade. Glycosylation reactions demonstrated that PGANT3 glycosylates certain extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins. Immunoprecipitation experiments revealed that PGANT3 glycosylates tiggrin, an ECM protein known to bind integrin. We propose that this glycosyltransferase is uniquely responsible for glycosylating tiggrin in the wing disc, thus modulating proper cell adhesion through integrin-ECM interactions. This study provides the first evidence for the role of O-glycosylation in a developmentally regulated, integrin-mediated, cell adhesion event and reveals a novel player in wing blade formation during Drosophila development.  相似文献   

8.
Glycosylation, and especially O-linked glycosylation, remains a critical blind spot in the understanding of post-translational modifications. Due to their nature as proteins defined by a large density and abundance of O-glycosylation, mucins present extra challenges in the analysis of their structure and function. However, recent breakthroughs in multiple areas of research have rendered mucin-domain glycoproteins more accessible to current characterization techniques. In particular, the adaptation of mucinases to glycoproteomic workflows, the manipulation of cellular glycosylation pathways, and the advances in synthetic methods to more closely mimic mucin domains have introduced new and exciting avenues to study mucin glycoproteins. Here, we summarize recent developments in understanding the structure and biological function of mucin domains and their associated glycans, from glycoproteomic tools and visualization methods to synthetic glycopeptide mimetics.  相似文献   

9.
Genome-wide association studies have identified GALNT2 as a candidate gene in lipid metabolism, but it is not known how the encoded enzyme ppGalNAc-T2, which contributes to the initiation of mucin-type O-linked glycosylation, mediates this effect. In two probands with elevated plasma high-density lipoprotein cholesterol and reduced triglycerides, we identified a mutation in GALNT2. It is shown that carriers have improved postprandial triglyceride clearance, which is likely attributable to attenuated glycosylation of apolipoprotein (apo) C-III, as observed in their plasma. This protein inhibits lipoprotein lipase (LPL), which hydrolyses plasma triglycerides. We show that an apoC-III-based peptide is a substrate for ppGalNAc-T2 while its glycosylation by the mutant enzyme is impaired. In addition, neuraminidase treatment of apoC-III which removes the sialic acids from its glycan chain decreases its potential to inhibit LPL. Combined, these data suggest that ppGalNAc-T2 can affect lipid metabolism through apoC-III glycosylation, thereby establishing GALNT2 as a lipid-modifying gene.  相似文献   

10.
Episialin is a mucin-type glycoprotein present at the luminal side of most glandular epithelial cells. We have isolated cDNA clones encoding episialin and determined the structure of the gene. The gene encodes a transmembrane protein which consists of, for the greater part, tandem repeats of 20 amino acids. The number of these repeats varies between 40 and 90 among different alleles. The repeats and most of the remainder of the protein are very rich in potential O-linked glycosylation sites. Two different splice variants were found. Interestingly, the proteins encoded by these two variants differ in their signal sequences and in the extreme amino-terminal parts of the mature proteins, suggesting alternative processing of these two species.  相似文献   

11.
Post-translational glycosylation is a universal modification of proteins in eukarya, archaea and bacteria. Two recent publications describe the first confirmed report of a bacterial N-linked glycosylation pathway in the human gastrointestinal pathogen Campylobacter jejuni. In addition, an O-linked glycosylation pathway has been identified and characterized in C. jejuni and the related species Campylobacter coli. Both pathways have similarity to the respective N- and O-linked glycosylation processes in eukaryotes. In bacteria, homologues of the genes in both pathways are found in other organisms, the complex glycans linked to the glycoproteins share common biosynthetic precursors and these modifications could play similar biological roles. Thus, Campylobacter provides a unique model system for the elucidation and exploitation of glycoprotein biosynthesis.  相似文献   

12.
In the last two decades, our knowledge of the role of glycans in development and signal transduction has expanded enormously. While most work has focused on the importance of N-linked or mucin-type O-linked glycosylation, recent work has highlighted the importance of several more unusual forms of glycosylation that are the focus of this review. In particular, the ability of O-fucose glycans on the epidermal growth factor-like (EGF) repeats of Notch to modulate signaling places glycosylation alongside phosphorylation as a means to modulate protein-protein interactions and their resultant downstream signals. The recent discovery that O-glucose modification of Notch EGF repeats is also required for Notch function has further expanded the range of glycosylation events capable of modulating Notch signaling. The prominent role of Notch during development and in later cell-fate decisions underscores the importance of these modifications in human biology. The role of glycans in intercellular signaling events is only beginning to be understood and appears ready to expand into new areas with the discovery that thrombospondin type 1 repeats are also modified with O-fucose glycans. Finally, a rare form of glycosylation called C-mannosylation modifies tryptophans in some signaling competent molecules and may be a further layer of complexity in the field. We will review each of these areas focusing on the glycan structures produced, the consequence of their presence, and the enzymes responsible.  相似文献   

13.
The biosynthesis, structures, and functions of O-glycosylation, as a complex posttranslational event, is reviewed and compared for the various types of O-glycans. Mucin-type O-glycosylation is initiated by tissue-specific addition of a GalNAc-residue to a serine or a threonine of the fully folded protein. This event is dependent on the primary, secondary, and tertiary structure of the glycoprotein. Further elongation and termination by specific transferases is highly regulated. We also describe some of the physical and biological properties that O-glycosylation confers on the protein to which the sugars are attached. These include providing the basis for rigid conformations and for protein stability. Clustering of O-glycans in Ser/Thr(/Pro)-rich domains allows glycan determinants such as sialyl Lewis X to be presented as multivalent ligands, essential for functional recognition. An additional level of regulation, imposed by exon shuffling and alternative splicing of mRNA, results in the expression of proteins that differ only by the presence or absence of Ser/Thr(/Pro)-rich domains. These domains may serve as protease-resistant spacers in cell surface glycoproteins. Further biological roles for O-glycosylation discussed include the role of isolated mucin-type O-glycans in recognition events (e.g., during fertilization and in the immune response) and in the modulation of the activity of enzymes and signaling molecules. In some cases, the O-linked oligosac-charides are necessary for glycoprotein expression and processing. In contrast to the more common mucin-type O-glycosylation, some specific types of O-glycosylation, such as the O-linked attachment of fucose and glucose, are sequon dependent. The reversible attachment of O-linked GlcNAc to cytoplasmic and nuclear proteins is thought to play a regulatory role in protein function. The recent development of novel technologies for glycan analysis promises to yield new insights in the factors that determine site occupancy, structure-function relationship, and the contribution of O-linked sugars to physiological and pathological processes. These include diseases where one or more of the O-glycan processing enzymes are aberrantly regulated or deficient, such as HEMPAS and cancer.  相似文献   

14.
A high molecular weight glycoprotein was isolated from the lavage fluid of a patient with alveolar proteinosis by gel chromatography with Sepharose CL-4B. The glycoprotein gave a single band stainable with alcian blue and with periodate-Schiff reagent on the cellulose acetate membrane electrophoresis. The glycoprotein did not penetrate 3.3% polyacrylamide gel but moved into 1% agarose gel as a periodate-Schiff positive single band, when electrophoresed in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate. The chemical analysis and the results of the beta-elimination reaction showed the presence of O-linked carbohydrate chains characteristic for a mucin-type glycoprotein. These data provide the first characterization of a mucin-type glycoprotein isolated from lung in pulmonary alveolar proteinosis.  相似文献   

15.
Enterohaemorrhagic and enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EHEC and EPEC) are gastrointestinal pathogens responsible for severe diarrheal illness. EHEC and EPEC form “attaching and effacing” lesions during colonization and, upon adherence, inject proteins directly into host intestinal cells via the type III secretion system (T3SS). Injected bacterial proteins have a variety of functions but generally alter host cell biology to favor survival and/or replication of the pathogen. Non-LEE-encoded effector A (NleA) is a T3SS-injected effector of EHEC, EPEC, and the related mouse pathogen Citrobacter rodentium. Studies in mouse models indicate that NleA has an important role in bacterial virulence. However, the mechanism by which NleA contributes to disease remains unknown. We have determined that the following translocation into host cells, a serine and threonine-rich region of NleA is modified by host-mediated mucin-type O-linked glycosylation. Surprisingly, this region was not present in several clinical EHEC isolates. When expressed in C. rodentium, a non-modifiable variant of NleA was indistinguishable from wildtype NleA in an acute mortality model but conferred a modest increase in persistence over the course of infection in mixed infections in C57BL/6J mice. This is the first known example of a bacterial effector being modified by host-mediated O-linked glycosylation. Our data also suggests that this modification may confer a selective disadvantage to the bacteria during in vivo infection.  相似文献   

16.
The herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) glycoprotein gC-1 is engaged both in viral attachment and viral immune evasion mechanisms in the infected host. Besides several N-linked glycans, gC-1 contains numerous O-linked glycans, mainly localized in two pronase-resistant clusters in the N-terminal domain of gC-1. In the present study we construct and characterize one gC-1 mutant virus, in which two basic amino acids (114K and 117R) in a putative O-glycosylation sequon were changed to alanine. We found that this modification did not modify the N-linked glycosylation but increased the content of O-linked glycans considerably. Analysis of the O-glycosylation capacity of wild-type and mutant gC-1 was performed by in vitro glycosylation assays with synthetic peptides derived from the mutant region predicted to present new O-glycosylation sites. Thus the mutant peptide region served as a better substrate for polypeptide GalNAc-transferase 2 than the wild-type peptide, resulting in increased rate and number of O-glycan attachment sites. The predicted increase in O-linked glycosylation resulted in two modifications of the biological properties of mutant virus-that is, an impaired binding to cells expressing chondroitin sulfate but not heparan sulfate on the cell surface and a significantly reduced plaque size in cultured cells. The results suggested that basic amino acids present within O-glycosylation signals may down-regulate the amount of O-linked glycans attached to a protein and that substitution of such amino acid residues may have functional consequences for a viral glycoprotein involving virus attachment to permissive cells as well as viral cell-to-cell spread.  相似文献   

17.
MOTIVATION: Although, it is known that O-glycosidically linked oligosaccharides are commonly conjugated to a serine, threonine or hydroxylysine residue of the polypeptide, the chemical nature of the anchoring monosaccharide and the size of the oligosaccharide unit varies. Among different types, O-linked or mucin-type oligosaccharides are intimately involved in the secretion of proteins, be they enzymes, hormones or structural glycoproteins. Knowledge of the linkage sites in glycoproteins is critical to the design of specific and efficient inhibitors against the enzyme to catalyse the formation of the carbohydrate-peptide linkage. RESULTS: We present a method for predicting the linkage sites in O-linked glycoproteins using bio-basis function neural networks. The mean prediction accuracy of this method is 91.15 +/- 2.75% while it is 82.28 +/- 6.45% using back-propagation neural networks. Importantly, this method has significantly reduced the CPU time for modelling.  相似文献   

18.
We present a detailed protocol for the structural analysis of protein-linked glycans. In this approach, appropriate for glycomics studies, N-linked glycans are released using peptide N-glycosidase F and O-linked glycans are released by reductive alkaline beta-elimination. Using strategies based on mass spectrometry (matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry and nano-electrospray ionization mass spectrometry/mass spectrometry (nano-ESI-MS-MS)), chemical derivatization, sequential exoglycosidase digestions and linkage analysis, the structures of the N- and/or O-glycans are defined. This approach can be used to study the glycosylation of isolated complex glycoproteins or of numerous glycoproteins encountered in a complex biological medium (cells, tissues and physiological fluids).  相似文献   

19.
Recently, we provided evidence that the glycosylation of hamster oviductin, a member of the mucin family of glycoproteins, is regulated during the estrous cycle. In order to further elucidate the glycosylation process of oviductal glycoproteins, we identified biosynthetic pathways involved in the assembly of mucin-type O-linked oligosaccharide (O-glycan) chains in the hamster oviduct. Our results demonstrated that the hamster oviduct has high activities of glycosyltransferases that synthesize O-glycans with core 1, 2, 3 and 4 structures as well as elongated structures. Oviduct therefore represents a typical mucin-secreting tissue. Our results also showed that specific glycosyltransferase activities are regulated during the estrous cycle. Mucin-type core 2 beta6-GlcNAc-transferase (C2GnT2) is responsible for synthesizing core 2 and core 4 structures in the oviduct. Specific assays for C2GnT2 revealed a cyclical pattern throughout the estrous cycle with high activity at the stages of proestrus and estrus and low activity at diestrus 1. Using semiquantitative RT-PCR, the mRNA levels for C2GnT2 in the estrous cycle stages could be correlated with the enzyme activities. An increase in glycosyltransferase activity in the hamster oviduct at the time of ovulation suggests that glycosylation of oviductal glycoproteins may be necessary for these proteins to exert their functions during the process of fertilization.  相似文献   

20.
We investigated the oligosaccharide sequence of glycoconjugates, mainly sialoglycoconjugates, in the horse oviductal ampulla during oestrus by means of lectin and pre-lectin methods such as the KOH-neuraminidase procedure to remove sialic acid residues and incubation with N-glycosidase F to cleave N-linked glycans. Ciliated cells displayed N-linked oligosaccharides throughout the cytoplasm. The cilia glycocalyx expressed both N- and O-linked (mucin-type) oligosaccharides, both showing a high variety of terminal sequences. In the most non-ciliated cells, the whole cytoplasm contained N-linked oligosaccharides with terminal alphaGal as well as mucin-type glycans with terminal Forssman pentasaccharides. In a few scattered non-ciliated cells, the whole cytoplasm displayed sialylated N-linked oligosaccharides with terminal Neu5Ac-GalNAc and O-linked glycans terminating with neutral and/or alphaGalNAc, Neu5Ac alpha2,6Gal/GalNAc, Neu5AcGal beta1,3GalNAc. Supra-nuclear granules, probably Golgi zones, of non-ciliated cells showed mainly O-linked glycans rich in sialic acid residues. The luminal surface of non-ciliated cells showed N-linked oligosaccharides, containing terminal/internal alphaMan/alphaGlc, betaGlcNAc and terminal alphaGal, as well as mucin-type oligosaccharides terminating with a large variety of either neutral saccharides or sialylated sequences. Apical protrusions containing O-linked oligosaccharides with terminal Forssman pentasaccharide, Neu5Ac-Gal beta1,4GlcNAc, Neu5Ac-GalNAc were seen in non-ciliated cells scattered along the epithelium. These findings show the presence of sialoglycoconjugates in the oviductal ampulla epithelium of the mare and the existence of different lectin binding profiles between ciliated and non-ciliated (secretory) cells, as well as the presence of non-ciliated cell sub-types which might determine functional differences along the ampullary epithelium of mare oviduct.  相似文献   

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