Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Illinois College of Medicine, 1819 West Polk Street M/C 536, Chicago, IL 60612, USA
Received on June 25, 2001; revised on August 15, 2001; accepted on August 17, 2001.
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Abstract |
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Key words: autopolysialylation/glycosylation/NCAM/polysialyltransferase/ST8Sia II
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Introduction |
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During embryogenesis, NCAM is present in a highly polysialylated form, with sialic acid comprising 30% of its molecular mass (Rothbard et al., 1982
; Goridis and Brunet, 1992
). High levels of polysialylated NCAM are observed in developing tissues, such as heart and muscle (Finne et al., 1987
; Watanabe et al., 1992
; Dubois et al., 1994
), kidney (Roth et al., 1987
, 1988b; Troy, 1995
), and brain (Finne et al., 1983
; Berardi et al., 1995
). However, the majority of adult tissues express very low levels or no polysialic acid (Edelman, 1985
; Rutishauser et al., 1988
; Troy, 1995
). Many lines of evidence indicate that the presence of highly polysialylated NCAM at the cell surface disrupts the homophilic binding properties of NCAM, as well as general cell adhesion (Sadoul et al., 1983
; Rutishauser et al., 1985
; Rutishauser, 1996
). This in turn facilitates cell migration during development (Rutishauser et al., 1988
; Acheson et al., 1991
; Rutishauser and Landmesser, 1996
) and neurite outgrowth (Kiss and Rougon, 1997
; Franceschini et al., 2001
). Polysialylated NCAM is also reexpressed on some metastatic cancers, such as neuroblastoma (Livingston et al., 1988
; Moolenaar et al., 1990
; Seidenfaden and Hildebrandt, 2001
), small cell lung carcinoma (Kibbelaar et al., 1989
; Nilsson, 1992
; Miyahara et al., 2001
), and the highly metastatic kidney tumor, Wilms tumor (Roth et al., 1988a
; Gluer et al., 1998
). Akin to its role during development, this reexpression of polysialic acid is thought to enhance the metastatic potential of tumor cells by decreasing their adhesion and facilitating their migration (Michalides et al., 1994
; Scheidegger et al., 1994
; Fukuda, 1996
).
Biosynthesis of polysialic acid in mammalian cells is carried out by two closely related enzymes, ST8Sia IV/PST (Nakayama et al., 1995; Yoshida et al., 1995
; Eckhardt et al., 1995
; Phillips et al., 1997
) and ST8Sia II/STX (Livingston and Paulson, 1993
; Kojima et al., 1995
; Scheidegger et al., 1995
). Whereas ST8Sia IV/PST and ST8Sia II/STX both catalyze the same polysialylation reaction, their expression patterns and polysialylation site preferences on NCAM differ. ST8Sia IV/PST and ST8Sia II/STX mRNA are both highly expressed in fetal brain (Livingston and Paulson, 1993
; Nakayama et al., 1995
; Yoshida et al., 1995
; Kurosawa et al., 1997
). However, though ST8Sia II/STX mRNA is absent in the adult brain (Livingston and Paulson, 1993
), ST8Sia IV/PST mRNA expression persists in a number of somatic tissues, as well as in areas of the adult brain that require continuing neurogenesis and neural plasticity (Nakayama et al., 1995
; Yoshida et al., 1995
; Phillips et al., 1997
). The distinct temporal and tissue-specific expression patterns of the polysialyltransferases suggest independent regulation at the transcriptional level (Seidenfaden et al., 2000
), and imply that ST8Sia II/STX is responsible for the embryonic polysialylation of NCAM (Angata et al., 1997
), whereas ST8Sia IV/PST is the dominant polysialyltransferase in the adult brain (Hildebrandt et al., 1998
).
In addition to the differences in their expression patterns, ST8Sia IV/PST and ST8Sia II/STX also exhibit distinct preferences with regard to the NCAM oligosaccharides they polysialylate. Members of the immunoglobulin superfamily of proteins, the NCAM 140 and 180 isoforms are composed of five Ig-like domains, two fibronectin type III repeats, and a transmembrane spanning segment followed by a cytoplasmic tail (Cunningham et al., 1987; Goridis and Brunet, 1992
). NCAM is modified by six Asn-linked oligosaccharides, three of which reside within the fifth Ig-like domain (numbered 4 through 6) and serve as the acceptors for polysialic acid addition (Nelson et al., 1995
; Franceschini et al., 2001
). Work by Angata et al. (1998)
demonstrated that ST8Sia IV/PST preferentially adds polysialic acid to the oligosaccharide on Asn 6, with a small amount added to the oligosaccharide on Asn 5. In contrast, ST8Sia II/STX evenly distributes polysialic acid between the oligosaccharides on Asn 5 and Asn 6 (Angata et al., 1998
). Furthermore, ST8Sia IV/PST synthesizes a larger amount of polysialic acid on NCAM than ST8Sia II/STX (Angata et al., 1998
). It is interesting to note that we have also observed that ST8Sia IV/PST is autopolysialylated to a greater degree than ST8Sia II/STX (Close and Colley, 1998
).
We previously reported that the ST8Sia IV/PST and ST8Sia II/STX polysialyltransferases are modified by 2,8-linked polysialic acid chains when expressed in COS-1 cells (Close and Colley, 1998
), a process termed autopolysialylation (Muhlenhoff et al., 1996
). These autopolysialylated enzymes localize to the Golgi, the cell surface, and are found soluble in the extracellular space. In addition, following their expression in COS-1 cells, we found that these polysialyltransferase proteins are the only polysialylated proteins expressed, suggesting that polysialylation is a protein-specific modification (Close and Colley, 1998
; Close et al., 2000
). Subsequent analysis revealed that ST8Sia IV/PST is modified by five Asn-linked oligosaccharides, and that the oligosaccharide modifying Asn 74 possesses the majority of the polysialic acid (Close et al., 2000
). Furthermore, when nonautopolysialylated mutants of ST8Sia IV/PST were coexpressed with full-length and soluble NCAM, we found that ST8Sia IV/PST autopolysialylation is not required for NCAM polysialylation, but that it did seem to increase the amount of polysialic acid added to NCAM (Close et al., 2000
). Both ST8Sia IV/PST and ST8Sia II/STX share 57% amino acid identity and catalyze the same polysialylation reaction on NCAM. This high degree of similarity suggests that the glycosylation pattern and activity requirements of ST8Sia II/STX may parallel that of ST8Sia IV/PST. Here we report on the carbohydrate modifications of ST8Sia II/STX and identify the requirements for ST8Sia II/STX autopolysialylation, as well as the requirements for polysialylation of NCAM by ST8Sia II/STX.
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Results |
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Glycosylation of Asn 89 (site 2), Asn 219 (site 4), and Asn 234 (site 5) is necessary for ST8Sia II/STX autopolysialylation
To establish whether the ST8Sia II/STX glycosylation mutants were autopolysialylated like wild-type enzyme, we expressed these mutant proteins in COS-1 cells that lack endogenous polysialyltransferases and their known glycoprotein substrates (Close and Colley, 1998). The expressing cells were metabolically labeled with 35S-Express protein labeling mix for 1 h and chased with unlabeled medium for 6 h; the mutant ST8Sia II/STX proteins were immunoprecipitated from the cell medium and analyzed by SDSPAGE and fluorography. Wild-type ST8Sia II/STX appeared as two forms: a 60-kDa glycosylated but nonautopolysialylated form and a polydisperse form with an apparent molecular mass ranging from
68 kDa to
160 kDa (Figure 2A, WT). Previous work established that the 60-kDa form represents a population of ST8Sia II/STX secreted from the cell modified only by high mannose oligosaccharides (Figure 2A, see arrow), whereas the larger form of ST8Sia II/STX represents the autopolysialylated enzyme (Close and Colley, 1998
). Mutation of Asn 0, 1, or 3 to Ser resulted in proteins that appeared to be autopolysialylated to the same extent as the wild-type ST8Sia II/STX (Figure 2A, mutants 0, 1, and 3). In contrast, mutation of Asn 2, Asn 4, or Asn 5 to Ser resulted in a substantial reduction in the high-molecular-mass autopolysialylated form of the enzyme, suggesting that the oligosaccharides attached to these Asn residues were modified by polysialic acid (Figure 2A, mutants 2, 4, and 5). To confirm that the polydisperse, high-molecular-mass forms of wild-type and mutant ST8Sia II/STX proteins are modified by
2,8-linked polysialic acid and that autopolysialylation of the mutant 2, 4, and 5 proteins is reduced, we performed a parallel immunoblot with the OL.28 antibody (Figure 2B). Proteins were expressed in COS-1 cells, immunoprecipitated from unlabeled cell lysates and medium, and analyzed by immunoblotting with the OL.28 antipolysialic acid antibody (OL.28 Ab) that is specific for
2,8-linked polyNeu5Ac of 5 units or longer (Close et al., 2000
; Sato et al., 2000
). We found that wild-type ST8Sia II/STX and the mutant proteins lacking the oligosaccharides on sites 0, 1, and 3 migrated with similar polysialylated molecular masses and exhibited equal intensities upon immunoblotting with OL.28 Ab (data not shown), suggesting that none of the oligosaccharides attached to these sites are polysialylated. Interestingly, although the autopolysialylation of the cell-associated mutant 2, 4, and 5 proteins was only marginally reduced compared to that of the wild-type ST8Sia II/STX, the autopolysialylation of the secreted mutant 2, 4, and 5 proteins was dramatically reduced relative to that of wild-type ST8Sia II/STX (Figure 2B, mutants 2, 4, and 5, Cell Lysates and Media).
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To address these issues we replaced the Asn 2, 4, and 5 residues with Gln rather than Ser to test the possibility that the nature of the amino acid at this site was having an impact on folding, and that this was leading to differences in trafficking and/or enzymatic activity. To confirm that the oligosaccharides on Asn 2, 4, and 5 possess all the polysialic acidmodifying ST8Sia II/STX, we also made double glycosylation site mutants (mutants 2.4, 2.5, and 4.5) and triple glycosylation site mutants (mutant 2.4.5) using both Ser and Gln to replace Asn. We first analyzed these single, double, and triple glycosylation site mutants by immunofluorescence microscopy (Figures 3 [Ser mutants] and 4 [Gln mutants]). We used both the V5 Ab to localize the proteins within the cell, and the OL.28 Ab to evaluate the level of autopolysialylation of the mutant proteins, as well as where these autopolysialylated proteins were localized. Previous work by Close et al. (2000) demonstrated that no endogenous COS-1 cell proteins are substrates for ST8Sia IV/PST, and we expected the same situation for ST8Sia II/STX. Staining with the V5 Ab revealed that, like the wild-type ST8Sia II/STX protein, all the single, double, and triple mutants (either Ser or Gln replacements) were localized in the Golgi. As more glycosylation sites were mutated, however, we did observe more ER staining in addition to distinct Golgi staining. This suggested that the presence of oligosaccharides at specific positions in the protein might aid the folding process. Notably, no differences were seen when we compared the localization of the Ser versus the Gln mutants.
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Evaluation of the double and triple glycosylation site mutants verified that the polysialic acid on ST8Sia II/STX is modifying the oligosaccharides on Asn 89 (site 2), Asn 219 (site 4), and Asn 234 (site 5). For both the Ser and Gln double glycosylation mutants, we observed a significant decrease in both intracellular and cell surface polysialic acid (Figures 3 and 4, Mut 2.4, Mut 2.5, and Mut 4.5, OL.28 Ab internal and surface staining). Replacing all three glycosylation sites with either Ser or Gln, led to proteins that were primarily Golgi localized but that exhibited no autopolysialylation (Figures 3 and 4, Mutant 2.4.5). These results were also supported by OL.28 immunoblot experiments shown in Figure 5 for the double and triple Ser glycosylation mutants. Notably, Mut 4.5 Ser, which still possesses an oligosaccharide on Asn 89 (site 2) exhibits the most autopolysialylation of the three double glycosylation site mutants in both the immunoblot and immunofluorescence experiments (Figure 3 and Figure 5, Mut 4.5). This suggested that the oligosaccharide attached to Asn 89 (site 2) may, like the analogous oligosaccharide attached to ST8Sia IV/PST, possess the majority of the polysialic acid.
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ST8Sia II/STX autopolysialylation is not a requirement for polysialylation of NCAM
To evaluate the polysialyltransferase activity of both the ST8Sia II/STX triple glycosylation site mutants (Mut 2.4.5 Ser and Mut 2.4.5 Gln), as well as the mutant proteins possessing only one Asn-linked oligosaccharide (2 Alone, 4 Alone, and 5 Alone), we evaluated their ability to polysialylate NCAM when coexpressed with this substrate in COS-1 cells. First, to determine whether the 2 Alone, 4 Alone, and 5 Alone mutant ST8Sia II/STX proteins were active, we coexpressed these proteins with full-length NCAM and evaluated NCAM polysialylation by immunofluorescence microscopy with the OL.28 Ab. We found that all three of these mutant proteins were capable of NCAM polysialylation, even though they were not autopolysialylated at a detectable level (Figure 7A). This indicated that the inability of these mutant ST8Sia II/STX proteins to autopolysialylate did not reflect a loss of catalytic activity or mislocalization to an early Golgi compartment.
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Whether inability of the Mut 2.4.5 Gln to polysialylate NCAM reflects the proteins inactivity or its inability to compartmentalize correctly is not clear. More important, the ability of the nonautopolysialylated Mut 2.4.5 Ser protein to polysialylate NCAM nicely parallels our previous report that nonautopolysialylated ST8Sia IV/PST is capable of NCAM polysialylation (Close et al., 2000) by demonstrating that autopolysialylation is not a requirement for ST8Sia II/STX enzymatic activity as well. In sum, our data in this work establish that autopolysialylation of ST8Sia II/STX, like that of ST8Sia IV/PST, is not a prerequisite for its ability to polysialylate NCAM. In addition, the mutant ST8Sia II/STX proteins analyzed in these experiments showed us that the level of NCAM polysialylation appears to depend on not only their autopolysialylation (as seen previously with the ST8Sia IV/PST glycosylation/autopolysialylation mutants [Close et al., 2000
]) but also other aspects of ST8Sia II/STX folding that can be altered by specific amino acid replacements (as observed with the Gln double mutants 2.5 and 4.5).
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Discussion |
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In this work we have demonstrated that ST8Sia II/STX has polysialic acid modifying the oligosaccharides attached to Asn 89, Asn 219, and Asn 234. These ST8Sia II/STX glycosylation sites are analogous to glycosylation sites 2, 4, and 5 in ST8Sia IV/PST (Close et al., 2000). Elimination of combinations of two of these glycosylation sites (Mut 2.4, Mut 2.5, and Mut 4.5) led to significant decreases in the autopolysialylation of the mutant ST8Sia II/STX proteins, and elimination of all three sites completely abolished ST8Sia II/STX autopolysialylation (see Figures 3, 4, and 5). The observation that the Ser triple Mut 2.4.5 protein was not autopolysialylated yet still was able to polysialylate NCAM demonstrated that this mutant protein was still catalytically active and that autopolysialylation was not required for NCAM polysialylation (Figure 7).
ST8Sia IV/PST and ST8Sia II/STX share 57% amino acid identity and catalyze the same polysialylation of NCAM oligosaccharides, with some slight differences in site preference and length of polysialic acid chains added (Angata et al., 1998; Kitazume-Kawaguchi et al., 2001
). Therefore, it was unexpected that the glycosylation and autopolysialylation of ST8Sia II/STX would be significantly different from that of ST8Sia IV/PST. Initially we were surprised that three sites in ST8Sia II/STX (rather than two sites as originally found for ST8Sia IV/PST) were autopolysialylated and that only one of these sites (site 2, Asn 74 in ST8Sia IV/PST and Asn 89 in ST8Sia II/STX) was the same for the two enzymes. In our original analysis of ST8Sia IV/PST polysialylation, we showed that the bulk of the polysialic acid (
80%) was found on the oligosaccharide attached to Asn 74 (site 2) (Close et al., 2000
). However, as clearly shown and discussed in that study, our data indicated that there is a residual amount of polysialic acid present on ST8Sia IV/PST after mutation of Asn 74. Experiments described in that work and from results of later unpublished work suggested that there was also polysialic acid modifying the oligosaccharide attached to Asn 119 (site 3). More recent experiments show that a myc-tagged version of the ST8Sia IV/PST Mut 2.3 protein, in contrast to the previously analyzed V5-tagged protein, exhibits weak autopolysialylation. This suggests that a third site, possibly Asn 219 (site 5), possesses a small amount of polysialic acid and that autopolysialylation is very sensitive to subtle folding differences, even those generated by the addition of a short peptide epitope to the enzymes carboxy-terminus (Close and Colley, unpublished data). Considered together, these data suggest that the autopolysialylation of the two polysialyltransferases may be more similar than we originally suspected.
Work with other sialyltransferases, such as ST8Sia IV/PST and the STtyr isoform of the 2, 6-sialyltransferase (ST6Gal I), has shown us that either the absence of an oligosaccharide or the presence of a foreign amino acid (Ser or Gln) at a consensus N-glycosylation site can have profound effects on protein trafficking and/or catalytic activity. ST8Sia IV/PST, ST8Sia II/STX, and the STtyr isoform of ST6Gal I are all transiently localized in the Golgi. By analogy with the STtyr isoform of the ST6Gal I, we believe that the majority of ST8Sia IV/PST and ST8Sia II/STX ultimately migrate to a post-Golgi compartment where it undergoes cleavage in the stem region and is then secreted. A smaller portion bypasses the cleavage event and is transported to the cell surface (see Ma et al., 1997
; Close and Colley, 1998
). We found that replacement of Asn 158 (one of two glycosylation sites) of the ST6Gal I STtyr isoform with a Gln residue generated a misfolded protein that was retained in the ER and rapidly degraded (Chen and Colley, 2000
). However, replacement of the same Asn residue with Ser generated an active protein that was stably localized in the Golgi and never cleaved and secreted into the cell medium (Chen and Colley, 2000
). In stark contrast, replacing Asn 119 (glycosylation site 3) of ST8Sia IV/PST with a Ser rendered it completely inactive without slowing its ER to Golgi trafficking, whereas replacing the same Asn residue with Gln generated a completely active polysialyltransferase (Close et al., 2000
; Bharaty et al., unpublished data).
Recently, Gerardy-Schahn and colleagues (Muhlenhoff et al., 2001) reported that autopolysialylation of murine ST8Sia II/STX was dependent on the presence of specific N-glycans attached to Asn 89 and Asn 219. This correlates well with the data presented here that demonstrates the oligosaccharides modifying Asn 89, Asn 219, and Asn 234 are necessary for human ST8Sia II/STX autopolysialylation (see Figures 2, 3, and 5). Muhlenhoff et al. (2001)
also reported that hamster ST8Sia IV/PST is modified by five Asn-linked oligosaccharides and that the bulk of the of polysialic acid is present on the oligosaccharide attached to Asn 74. This nicely parallels our previously published report that established that human ST8Sia IV/PST is modified by five Asn-linked oligosaccharides and that the oligosaccharide modifying Asn 74 is the major acceptor of polysialic acid (Close et al., 2000
). Based on the inability of their Gln replacement mutant, ST8SiaII
3,5,6 (analogous to sites 2, 4, and 5 in our numbering system), to polysialylate NCAM, Muhlenhoff et al. (2001)
again suggested that elimination of ST8Sia II/STX autopolysialylation leads to an abrogation of polysialyltransferase activity. In contrast, we found that a nonautopolysialylated mutant of ST8Sia II/STX, triple Ser mutant 2.4.5, is still active to polysialylate NCAM (see Figure 7A, B, and C). Moreover, we found that substitution of Gln residues for Asn residues in ST8Sia II/STX resulted in a catalytically inactive polysialyltransferase (see triple Gln mutant 2.4.5, Figure 7A, B, and C). Thus, it is likely that the inability of Muhlenhoff et al. (2001)
to detect any NCAM polysialylation activity of their nonautopolysialylated ST8Sia II/STX mutants is the result of replacement of Asn residues with Gln residues and the concomitant subtle perturbation of protein structure that leads to an inactive enzyme, rather than being suggestive of a functional link between autopolysialylation and catalytic activity.
From the work presented herein, it is clear that the folding of ST8Sia II/STX is much more sensitive to replacement of amino acids and the elimination of glycosylation sites than that of ST8Sia IV/PST. Even the alteration of one Asn residue and the resultant elimination of one glycosylation site significantly slowed the cleavage and secretion of the ST8Sia II/STX protein and decreased the amount observed at the cell surface (Figures 25). These effects were even more severe when two or more glycosylation sites were eliminated (Figures 35). In addition, ST8Sia II/STX catalytic activity was clearly compromised when Gln residues were used to replace Asn 89, 219, and 234. This was surprising because Gln is structurally more similar to Asn than is Ser. The double Asn to Gln mutants (Mut 2.4 Gln and Mut 4.5 Gln) exhibited a decreased ability to add polysialic acid to NCAM relative to identical Ser double mutants, and NCAM proteins polysialylated by these mutant ST8Sia II/STX proteins migrated with a reduced molecular mass compared to NCAM proteins polysialylated by wild-type ST8Sia II/STX (Figure 7C). This result suggested that the presence of a Gln residue at amino acid 219 was particularly damaging to the ability of ST8Sia II/STX to fully polysialylate NCAM. Similarly, while a triple Asn to Ser replacement mutant (Mut 2.4.5 Ser) was able to polysialylate NCAM, although to a lesser extent than wild-type ST8Sia II/STX, an identical triple Asn to Gln replacement mutant (Mut 2.4.5 Gln) was completely inactive in NCAM polysialylation.
The "alone" mutant series was originally generated to confirm the polysialylation of the oligosaccharides attached to Asn 89, Asn 219, and Asn 234 (sites 2, 4, and 5, respectively), and to determine which Asn-linked oligosaccharides were sufficient for ST8Sia II/STX autopolysialylation. We found that mutant proteins retaining the single glycosylation sites Asn 89, Asn 219, or Asn 234 exhibited no detectable autopolysialylation (Figure 6). This was unexpected because previously we found a mutant ST8Sia IV/PST protein retaining a single glycosylation site at Asn 74 (2 Alone ST8Sia IV/PST) was polysialylated to nearly wild-type levels (Close et al., 2000). Localization studies demonstrated the presence of these ST8Sia II/STX "alone" mutant proteins in the Golgi (Figure 6), and coexpression with full-length NCAM demonstrated that they were able to polysialylate NCAM despite their lack of detectable autopolysialylation (Figure 7A). These results suggest that the process of ST8Sia II/STX autopolysialylation may be cooperative, requiring more than one oligosaccharide to interact with the enzyme, or extremely sensitive to alterations in enzyme structure generated by the lack of oligosaccharides during the folding process.
In sum, we have definitively shown that autopolysialylation of both polysialyltransferases, ST8Sia IV/PST and ST8Sia II/STX, is not required for their ability to polysialylate NCAM. Gerardy-Schahn and colleagues (Muhlenhoff et al., 1996; Windfuhr et al., 2000
) have suggested a functional link between autopolysialylation and NCAM polysialylation. However, our previous (Close et al., 2000
) and present conclusions have been further substantiated by a recent report by Fukuda and colleagues (Angata et al., 2001
), in which they show that exogenous ST8Sia IV/PST expressed in insect cells is not autopolysialylated, yet is an active polysialyltransferase. Presently, the mechanism of enzyme autopolysialylation is not well understood. It is clear that polysialic acid chains are not preassembled on the oligosaccharides of the polysialyltransferase and then transferred to the oligosaccharides of NCAM (Muhlenhoff et al., 1996
). However, it is not known if autopolysialylation is a cis event, with one molecule of enzyme polysialylating its own oligosaccharides, or a trans event, with one molecule of enzyme polysialylating a neighbors oligosaccharides. In addition, why the presence of polysialic acid on ST8Sia IV/PST and ST8Sia II/STX enhances the amount of polysialic acid added to NCAM, and whether this reflects increased stability of the enzymesubstrate interaction is not clear. More work is clearly required to answer these questions and elucidate the mechanisms of autopolysialylation and NCAM polysialylation.
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Materials and methods |
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Site-directed mutagenesis of ST8Sia II/STX cDNA
Consensus N-glycosylation site Asn residues in full-length V5-tagged ST8Sia II/STX cDNA (Close and Colley, 1998) were mutated to Ser or Gln using the QuikChange site-directed mutagenesis system according to the manufacturers protocol (Stratagene). The following primers were used for mutation of the Asn codons to the Ser codons, with the mutating codon in bold:
Mutant 0, GCTGAAGTTGTAATATCCGGCTCCTCATCAC and GTGATGAGGAGCCGGATATTACAACTTCAGC
Mutant 1, GTTGTTGACAGAAGTTCCGAAAGCATCAAGC and GCTTGATGCTTTCGGAACTTCTGTCAACAAC
Mutant 2, CCAAATGGAGACATTCCCAGACGCTCTCTC and GAGAGAGCGTCTGGGAATGTCTCCATTTGG
Mutant 3, GACAGCACCATGTCCGTGTCCCAGAACC and GTTCTGGGACACGGACATGGTGCTGTCTC
Mutant 4, GAGGACTTGGTCTCCGCCACGTGGCG and CGCCACGTGGCGGAGACCAAGTCCTC
Mutant 5, GCACAGCCTCTCCGGCAGCATCCTG and GGATGCTGCCGGAGAGGCTGTGCAG.
The following primers were used for mutation of the Asn codons to the Gln codons, with the mutating codon in bold:
Mutant 2, CCAAATGGAGACATCAACAGACGCTCTCTC and GAGAGAGCGTCTGTTGATGTCTCCATTTGG
Mutant 4, GAGGACTTGGTCCAAGCCACGTGGCG and CGCCACGTGGCTTGGACCAAGTCCTC
Mutant 5, GCACAGCCTCCAAGGCAGCATCCTG and GGATGCTGCCTTGGAGGCTGTGCAG.
Each mutation was confirmed using the Sequenase version 2.0 DNA Sequencing kit (United States Biochemical) and the appropriate sequencing primer.
Transient transfection of COS-1 cells with mutant ST8Sia II/STX cDNAs
COS-1 cells maintained in DMEM, 10% FBS were plated on 100-mm tissue culture plates or 12-mm glass coverslips and grown in a 37°C, 5% CO2 incubator until 5070% confluent. Lipofectin transfections were performed according to the protocols provided by Life Technologies, as described previously (Close et al., 2000).
Immunofluorescence localization of mutant ST8Sia II/STX proteins
COS-1 cells were plated on glass coverslips, transiently transfected with wild-type or mutant V5-tagged ST8Sia II/STX cDNA, and processed for immunofluorescence microscopy as described previously (Colley et al., 1992; Close et al., 2000
). V5 Ab was diluted 1:100; the OL.28 Ab, FITC-conjugated secondary antibodies, goat anti-mouse IgG, and goat anti-mouse IgM, were diluted 1:200 in 5% normal goat serum/phosphate buffered saline (PBS) blocking buffer prior to use.
Metabolic labeling of cells and immunoprecipitation of ST8Sia II/STX proteins
Following transient transfection with wild-type or mutant V5-tagged ST8Sia II/STX cDNA and expression of these proteins for 18 h, COS-1 cells plated in 100-mm dishes were labeled for 1 h with 100 µCi/ml 35S-Express protein labeling mix (Perkin Elmer Life Sciences) and chased for either 0 h (cell lysates only) or 6 h as described previously (Close et al., 2000). The mutant and wild-type V5-tagged ST8Sia II/STX proteins were then immunoprecipitated from the cell lysates and 6 h chase media using 2 µg of V5 Ab and protein A-Sepharose (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) as previously described (Colley et al., 1989
; Close et al., 2000
). To avoid breakdown of the polysialic acid, the boiling step was omitted and the immunoprecipitation beads were resuspended in 50 µl of Laemmli sample buffer containing 5% ß-mercaptoethanol (BME) and directly loaded into the gel wells. Immunoprecipitated proteins were separated on 7.5% separating/3% stacking SDSpolyacrylamide gels (Laemmli, 1970
). Radiolabeled proteins were visualized by fluorography using 10% 2,5-diphenyloxalzole in dimethyl sulfoxide (Bonner and Lasky, 1974
), and gels were exposed to Kodak BioMax MR film at 80°C.
Immunoprecipitation and immunoblot of ST8Sia II/STX proteins
COS-1 cells were transiently transfected with wild-type or mutant V5-tagged ST8Sia II/STX cDNA as previously described (Close et al., 2000). Eighteen hours posttransfection, cell medium was collected. The V5-tagged ST8Sia II/STX mutant and wild-type proteins were immunoprecipitated from the cell lysates and media and electrophoresed as described above. Following electrophoresis, proteins were subjected to immunoblotting as previously described (Close et al., 2000
). OL.28 Ab (IgM) was used at a 1:500 dilution, and the HRP-conjugated secondary antibody, goat anti-mouse IgM, was used at a 1:8000 dilution.
Indirect immunofluorescence microscopy of COS-1 cells coexpressing full-length NCAM and mutant ST8Sia II/STX proteins
COS-1 cells maintained in DMEM, 10% FBS were plated on 12-mm glass coverslips and grown in a 37°C, 5% CO2 incubator until 5070% confluent and essentially transfected as previously described (Close et al., 2000). For each coverslip, the ratio of V5-tagged mutant ST8Sia II/STX to NCAM 140 plasmid DNA transfected was 1:1 (0.5 µg:0.5 µg). Cells were fixed and processed for immunofluorescence microscopy as previously described (Close et al., 2000
). Primary antibodies (V5 Ab and OL.28 Ab) and secondary antibodies (FITC-conjugated goat anti-mouse IgG and goat anti-mouse IgM) were diluted 1:200 in blocking buffer (5% normal goat serum in PBS) prior to use.
Precipitation and immunoblot analysis of soluble NCAM-Fc from COS-1 cells coexpressing mutant ST8Sia II/STX proteins
In duplicate, COS-1 cells plated on 100-mm tissue culture plates were transiently cotransfected with wild-type and mutant V5-tagged ST8Sia II/STX and NCAM-Fc plasmid DNA at a ratio of 4:1, respectively (20 µg:5 µg). For the first set of plates, cells were radiolabeled for 1 h with 100 µCi/ml 35S-Express protein labeling mix (Perkin Elmer Life Sciences) and chased for 3 h with 4 ml unlabeled DMEM, 10% FBS as previously described (Close et al., 2000). NCAM-Fc was precipitated from the medium using protein-A Sepharose, and the precipitated proteins were separated on 5% separating/3% stacking SDSpolyacrylamide gels after the addition of Laemmli sample buffer containing 5% BME and incubation of the protein A-Sepharose beads at 65°C for 5 min. This heating step was added to eliminate the formation of NCAM-Fc dimers. Gels were processed for fluorography as described above. For the second set of plates, unlabeled NCAM-Fc was precipitated from the medium 18 h posttransfection as described above. The precipitated NCAM-Fc proteins were subjected to immunoblotting with OL.28 Ab as described above.
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