©1995 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
A Human STX cDNA Confers Polysialic Acid Expression in Mammalian Cells (*)

(Received for publication, July 7, 1995)

E. Paul Scheidegger (1)(§) Lawrence R. Sternberg (1) Jürgen Roth (3) John B. Lowe (1)(§) (2)(¶)

From the  (1)Howard Hughes Medical Research Institute, the (2)Department of Pathology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-0650 and the (3)Department of Pathology, Division of Cell and Molecular Pathology, University Hospital, Zürich CH-8091, Switzerland

ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES

ABSTRACT

Polysialic acid, or PSA, is a term used to refer to linear homopolymers of alpha(2,8)-sialic acid residues displayed at the surface of some mammalian cells. PSA is typically linked to the neural cell adhesion molecule N-CAM, where it can modulate the homotypic adhesive properties of this polypeptide. PSA expression is developmentally regulated, presumably through mechanisms involving regulated expression of sialyltransferases involved in PSA biosynthesis. Several different sialyltransferase sequences have been implicated in PSA expression, although the precise roles of these enzymes in this context remain unclear. One such sequence, termed STX, maintains approximately 59% amino acid sequence identity with another sialyltransferase (PST-1, from hamster; PST, human) that is known to participate in PSA expression. While a murine STX fusion protein can catalyze the synthesis of a single alpha(2,8)-sialic acid linkage in vitro, the ability of STX to participate in PSA expression in vivo has not been demonstrated. We show here that STX transcripts are present in a PSA-positive, N-CAM-positive human small cell carcinoma line (NCI-H69/F3), but are absent in a variant of this line (NCI-H69/E2) selected to be PSA-negative and N-CAM-positive. To functionally confirm this correlation, we have cloned a human cDNA encoding the human STX sequence, and show, by transfection studies, that human STX can restore PSA expression when expressed in the PSA-negative, N-CAM-positive small cell carcinoma variant. We furthermore show that STX can confer PSA expression when expressed in a PSA-negative, N-CAM-positive murine cell line (NIH-3T3 cells), or when expressed in PSA-negative, N-CAM-negative COS-7 cells. These observations imply that STX, like PST-1/PST, can determine PSA expression in vivo. When considered together with the correlation between STX expression and PSA expression in vivo in the brain, these results suggest a regulatory role for STX in PSA expression in the developing central nervous system and small cell lung carcinoma.


INTRODUCTION

Sialyltransferases represent a family of terminal glycosyltransferases that catalyze the attachment of sialic acid to carbohydrates of many glycoproteins and glycolipids(1) . Sialic acids are key determinants of carbohydrate structures involved in a variety of biological processes and are widely distributed on many cell types (2, 3, 4) . Homopolymers of sialic acids in alpha(2,8) linkage (polysialic acid, PSA, (^1)also abbreviated as polySia) have a more restricted spatio-temporal tissue distribution pattern than the more commonly found alpha(2,6)- and alpha(2,3)-linked sialic acid residues. For example, PSA is expressed by neuronal tissues, in the heart and the developing kidney, and in association with malignant transformation, such as in small cell lung carcinoma (SCLC)(5, 6, 7, 8) . Furthermore, PSA has been reported to be associated with only two proteins, the neural cell adhesion molecule (N-CAM) and sodium channel alpha subunits(9, 10) . Changes in the amount of PSA on N-CAM modulates the adhesive properties of N-CAM, and also affects the cell surface properties of other molecules like some integrins, N-cadherin, and G4/NgCAM(11, 12, 13, 14) . These effects are presumed to be due to the unusual physicochemical properties of this very large, abundant, negatively charged, and linear cell surface polyglycan(14) .

A requirement for N-CAM as an acceptor molecule in PSA synthesis is implied from several studies(15, 16) , although this has not been demonstrated directly. Other studies suggest that PSA biosynthesis involves the concerted activity of two or more specific sialyltransferases(16, 17) . This includes a requirement for one or more alpha(2,3)-sialyltransferases to create alpha(2,3)-linked sialic acid moieties, that in turn are the presumed acceptor substrate for subsequent addition of alpha(2,8)-linked sialic acid moieties(18, 19) . It is possible that PSA synthesis then proceeds through a two-step process involving the addition of a single alpha(2,8)-linked sialic acid residue to the alpha(2,3)-linked sialic acid by one distinct alpha(2,8)-sialyltransferase (an ``initiase'' reaction), followed by the addition of multiple alpha(2,8)-linked sialic acid residues that yield PSA by a second distinct alpha(2,8)-sialyltransferase (a ``polymerase'' reaction). This possibility is supported by in vitro experiments indicating that at least three different alpha(2,8)-sialyltransferases (ST8SiaI, GD3 synthase, (20, 21, 22) ; ST8SiaII, STX, (23) ; ST8SiaIII, (24) ) can catalyze the attachment of a single alpha(2,8)-linked sialic acid residue to terminal alpha(2,3)-sialic acid linkages.

Alternatively, a single alpha(2,8)-sialyltransferase may operate to directly catalyze PSA synthesis on a glycoconjugate template containing a terminal alpha(2,3)-linked sialic acid. This notion is supported by the recent demonstration that expression of a single alpha(2,8)-sialyltransferase gene, termed PST-1(25) , or PST(26) , is sufficient for the expression of PSA in N-CAM-positive, PSA-negative mammalian cell lines (CHO-2A10, NIH-3T3, and COS-hN-6, a COS cell line expressing with human N-CAM-140 cDNA, (25) ; COS-1 cells and HeLa cells transfected with an N-CAM expression vector, (26) ). In principle, both such modes of PSA synthesis may exist, although this remains to be confirmed, since it has not yet been possible to recreate polymerization of alpha(2,8)-linked sialic acids in vitro.

The STX gene represents a member of the sialyltransferase gene family whose developmentally regulated expression patterns correlate well with PSA expression in certain tissues(1, 24, 27) . A role for this sequence in PSA expression remained circumstantial, however, since initial efforts failed to demonstrate an enzymatic activity associated with the (rat) STX polypeptide(27) . Subsequent efforts have demonstrated that a recombinant (mouse) STX-protein A fusion protein can catalyze the synthesis of a single alpha(2,8)-sialic acid linkage in vitro(23) . Nonetheless, a definitive demonstration that STX participates in PSA expression, in vitro or in vivo, has not been accomplished.

We show here that STX expression correlates with PSA expression in a PSA-positive human small cell lung carcinoma (SCLC) cell line (NCI-H69/F3)(8) , whereas STX transcripts are absent from a variant of this line selected to be PSA-negative (NCI-H69/E2)(8) . Transfection of the PSA-negative variant SCLC line with an STX expression vector restores PSA expression in that line, and in other PSA-negative cell lines. The observations imply that transcriptional regulation of STX can regulate PSA expression, suggest that STX shares overlapping enzymatic activity with PST-1/PST, and imply that determination of PSA expression by STX can be independent of N-CAM expression.


EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES

Cell Lines

Two N-CAM-positive clonal SCLC sublines differing in PSA expression (NCI-H69/F3 and NCI-H69/E2) have been described(8) . NIH-3T3 and COS-7 cells were obtained from the American Type Culture Collection and were cultured in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium containing 10% fetal calf serum with penicillin-streptomycin.

Molecular Cloning of a Full-length Human STX cDNA

A cDNA library was constructed using the mammalian expression vector pCDM8 (Invitrogen) and poly(A) RNA from the PSA-positive cell line (NCI-H69/F3), according to (28) . A 580-bp fragment corresponding to bp 69-649 of a human STX cDNA (1) was generated with the PCR, using PCR primers derived from the partial STX cDNA (1) (5` primer, GCCCACAGCTTCGTCATCAGGTG; 3` primer, GGCCGACAGTCAGTTTCAAAGCCC), the NCI-H69/F3 cell cDNA library as a template, and standard PCR conditions (Taq polymerase; 95 °C for 30 s, 65 °C for 30 s and 72 °C for 90 s; 35 cycles). The resulting 580-bp PCR product was subcloned into pCR II (Invitrogen) and sequenced. The 580-bp insert was used to screen (29) a human fetal heart gt11 cDNA library (Clontech). The inserts from two positive clones (3.5 and 2.5 kb) were subcloned into pCDNAI (Invitrogen), and sequenced. Both clones were deficient in the 5` end of the coding region. The 5` RACE procedure (30) was used to obtain the 5` end of the open reading frame, using conditions suggested by the RACE reagent manufacturer (Life Technologies, Inc.), except that the reverse transcriptase reaction was carried out at 50 °C. RACE reactions used poly(A) RNA from NCI-H69/F3 cells, two gene-specific primers (5`-TGGTGATGAGGAGCCGTTTATTACAACTTC; 5`-CACAGCTGATCTGATTGTACCTCTGCCTCC), and the PCR (two sequential rounds of 35 cycles each, involving incubations at 95 °C for 30 s, 70 °C for 30 s, and 72 °C for 60 s). A 150-bp 5` RACE product was subcloned; its sequence was consistent with that predicted for the 5` end of the human STX cDNA. This fragment was appended to the 5` end of the 2.5-kb cDNA described above at a shared EcoRI site, to form a cDNA encompassing a single long open reading frame predicted to encode the entire STX polypeptide. The resulting fragment was subcloned in the ``sense'' orientation between the HindIII and EcoRI sites of the mammalian expression vector pCDNAI, to create the vector pSTXFL.

Northern Blot Analysis

Northern blots were prepared as described(29) , using poly(A) mRNA isolated from SCLC lines, or from a 17-day mouse embryo. Blots containing mRNA from multiple human tissues were obtained from Clontech. Blots were probed in 50% formamide, 5 times SSC, 1 times PE, at 42 °C, using P-labeled (29) DNA fragments. Probes included bp 69-649 of the human STX cDNA(1) , bp 404-875 of the human GD3 synthase cDNA(20) , or a 780-bp segment of the human glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase cDNA(31) . A PST-1 probe (25) was prepared using the PCR, cDNA prepared (29) from Chinese hamster ovary cell RNA, and PCR primers corresponding to bp 79-108 (5` primer) and to bp 358-331 (3` primer) of the hamster PST-1 cDNA (25) . A mST8Sia III probe was prepared using the PCR, a mouse brain cDNA library (Clontech), and PCR primers corresponding to bp 106-133 (5` primer) and to bp 351-378 (3` primer)(24) . Blots were washed at 50 °C in 2 times SSC, 0.1% SDS for 30 min and were subjected to autoradiography.

Transfection Procedures

- All transient transfections were completed using a commercially available liposome-based transfection reagent (DOTAP, Boehringer Mannheim), according to the manufacturer's instructions. The SCLC cell line NCI-H69/E2 was co-transfected with pRSVlarge T(32) , a pBR322-based vector that encodes the SV40 large T antigen, to facilitate episomal replication of the co-transfected expression plasmids carrying the SV40 origin of replication. Transfection efficiencies were controlled for by co-transfecting with the vector pCDNAI-CAT (Invitrogen), and subsequently assaying extracts prepared form the transfected cells for chloramphenicol acetyltransferase activity(29) .

Immunohistochemical Analysis

Transfected cells were analyzed by fluorescence-activated flow cytometry(33) . Cells were stained and washed at 4 °C in staining medium (RPMI 1640 medium, 2% fetal calf serum, 0.1 M HEPES, pH = 7.4). PSA expression was assessed with the mouse monoclonal anti-PSA antibody mAb 735 (used at 5 µg/ml)(34) , from Dr. D. Bitter-Suermann (Institute of Medical Microbiology, Mainz, Germany). Rabbit anti-human N-CAM antiserum was used at a saturating concentration (Dako). Cell-bound antibodies were detected with fluorescein-conjugated goat anti-mouse or anti-rabbit antibodies (Sigma).


RESULTS AND DISCUSSION

Recent molecular cloning work demonstrates that a sialyltransferase sequence termed PST-1, or PST, (for polysialyltransferase) can yield cell surface PSA expression when expressed in PSA-negative cell lines(25, 26) . Although these data implicate PST-1/PST in PSA expression, an in vitro enzymatic correlate for these observations is not yet available. Among all known sialyltransferases, PST-1/PST is most similar to one termed STX (59% overall amino acid sequence identity; hamster PST-1 or human PST versus rat STX). STX is expressed primarily in the fetal and newborn brain, but not in the adult brain, and thus correlates with the temporal sequence of PSA expression in that tissue. These considerations suggest a role for STX in the developmental regulation of PSA expression in the central nervous system. However, efforts to assign an enzymatic activity to the rat STX sequence have not met with success(27) . More recent work indicates that, in vitro, mouse STX can utilize radiolabeled CMP-sialic acid to incorporate radiolabeled sialic acid into sialylated, N-linked glycoproteins(23) . Indirect evidence suggests that alpha(2,8)-sialic acid linkages were formed by STX in these experiments, although there is currently no direct evidence that STX participates in PSA biosynthesis or expression.

Differential Expression of Human STX in SCLC Cell Lines

We have described an N-CAM-positive, PSA-positive small cell lung cancer cell line (NCI-H69/F3), and the isolation and characterization of clonal variants of this line that remain N-CAM-positive, but that are deficient in PSA expression(8) . One such PSA-negative line (NCI-H69/E2) and the PSA-positive control line NCI-H69/F3 were used to explore the role of PST-1 and STX in PSA expression(8) . Flow cytometry analyses confirm that the NCI-H69/F3 line expresses N-CAM and PSA, whereas the variant line NCI-H69/E2 is deficient in cell surface PSA expression, yet remains positive for N-CAM expression (Fig. 1A). The major carrier of PSA in the NCI-H69/F3 line is N-CAM, as reported previously(8) .


Figure 1: Flow cytometry analyses of PSA expression. A, SCLC cell lines NCI-H69/F3 and E2. Cell lines NCI-H69/F3 and E2 were analyzed by flow cytometry, following staining with the anti-PSA monoclonal antibody mAb 735 (alpha PSA, solidline), with a polyclonal rabbit anti-human N-CAM antibody (alpha N-CAM, solidline), or with negative control antibodies (mouse IgG for alpha PSA; rabbit IgG for alpha N-CAM; dottedlines). B, mammalian cell lines transiently transfected with a vector (pSTXFL) encoding human STX. PSA-negative cell lines (NCI-H69/E2, NIH-3T3, COS-7) were transfected with a mammalian expression vector encoding human STX (pSTXFL, solidlines), or with a negative control vector (pCDNAI, dottedlines), as described under ``Experimental Procedures.'' Transfected cells were then stained with anti-PSA monoclonal antibody mAb 735 (alpha PSA), or with a negative control antibody, and were subjected to flow cytometry analysis as described under ``Experimental Procedures.''



Northern blot analyses indicate that the PSA-positive line NCI-H69/F3 is deficient in transcripts corresponding to PST-1/PST (although PST-1 transcripts are observed in human heart; Fig. 2B), indicating that this gene does not participate in PSA expression in these cells. Likewise, this cell line is deficient in GD3 synthase and mST8Sia III transcripts (data not shown). However, these analyses demonstrate that the STX transcript is easily detectable in the PSA-positive line (Fig. 2A). The STX transcript in the PSA-positive SCLC line (Fig. 2A) is similar in size (6.0 kb) to the human (5.7 kb, human heart; data not shown and (1) ) and rat (5.5 kb, (27) ) STX transcripts, and corresponds roughly to broad range (1.7-6.7 kb) of STX transcripts observed in the embryonic mouse(24) . By contrast, STX transcripts are absent from the PSA-negative variant SCLC line (Fig. 2A). These observations suggest that PSA expression in this pair of cell lines is controlled by transcriptional regulation of the STX gene.


Figure 2: Northern blot analysis of the PSA-positive and PSA-negative SCLC cell lines. A, Northern blot hybridized with a human STX probe. The Northern blot was prepared using poly(A) mRNA (2 µg/lane) isolated from the PSA-positive SCLC cell line (PSA+, NCI-H69/F3), from the PSA negative SCLC cell line (PSA-, NCI-H69/E2), and from a mouse embryo at embryonic day 17 (E17). The blot was probed with a segment of the human STX cDNA (``STX''), as described under ``Experimental Procedures.'' B, Northern blot hybridized with a hamster PST-1 probe. The blot shown in panelA was stripped of the STX probe (29) and hybridized with a segment of the hamster PST-1 gene (PST-1), as described under ``Experimental Procedures.'' Human heart (Heart) poly(A) RNA served as a positive control(26) . C, Northern blot hybridized with a human glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase probe (GAPDH). The blot shown in panelsA and B was stripped of the STX probe (29) and was hybridized with a segment of the human glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase gene, as described under ``Experimental Procedures.'' RNA molecular size standards are indicated on the left (in kilobases).



Primary Structure of a Human STX cDNA

We sought to confirm an essential role for STX in PSA expression in these cell lines by expressing the STX polypeptide in the PSA-negative line, and asking if this would convert the variant to a PSA-positive state. A human cDNA encompassing the entire coding region of the human STX polypeptide was therefore isolated and characterized (see ``Experimental Procedures''). The pSTXFL clone maintains a continuous 375-amino acid open reading frame (Fig. 3) encompassing segments termed sialylmotifs, which are highly conserved among members of the mammalian sialyltransferase superfamily(27) . The human STX protein maintains a 17-amino acid hydrophobic sequence near its NH(2) terminus. This segment is flanked by charged residues, and thus corresponds to a ``signal anchor'' sequence predicting a type II transmembrane orientation characteristic of glycosyltransferases(35) . Human STX differs from the rat enzyme at 8 positions (rat residues Ala-68, Leu-75, Ser-78, Gln-155, Thr-188, Gly-232, Ala-257, and Asn-308), for an overall 98% amino acid sequence identity between the rat and human enzymes(1) . Similarity to the mouse STX sequence cannot be determined since its DNA and derived protein sequence are not available(23) . Human STX shares an overall amino acid sequence identity of 59% with hamster PST-1/human PST(25, 26) , 31% with human GD3 synthase(20) , and 36% with mouse ST8Sia III(24) , three other mammalian sialyltransferases implicated in the synthesis of alpha(2,8)-linked sialic acid linkages. There are local regions of sequence identity among these enzymes that are substantially higher than these values, including the region encompassing the L and S sialylmotifs (Fig. 3) (data not shown).


Figure 3: Human STX cDNA and predicted amino acid sequences. The DNA sequence of the coding region of the human STX is shown above the predicted amino acid sequence. The predicted signal anchor sequence is doublyunderlined and italicized. Potential asparagine-linked oligosaccharide attachment sites are underlined. Amino acids underlined with a dottedline correspond to consensus sequences identified previously for mammalian sialyltransferases (the ``L'' and ``S'' sialylmotifs; Refs. 1 and 20).



Expression of PSA in Cell Lines Transiently Transfected with the Human STX cDNA

To determine if human STX can restore PSA expression to the PSA-negative, STX-negative SCLC variant, the human STX cDNA was installed in a mammalian expression vector and was introduced into these cells by transfection (see ``Experimental Procedures''). A substantial fraction (30%) of the STX-transfected variant cells stain brightly (Fig. 1B) with the monoclonal antibody (mAb 735) specific for PSA(34) . The fraction of positive cells observed in this experiment is similar to the fraction of antigen (sialyl Lewis x)-positive cells seen when (sialyl Lewis x-negative) NCI-H69/E2 cells are transiently transfected with a control fucosyltransferase expression vector (pCDNAI-Fuc-TIII; (33) ) (data not shown). By contrast, the PSA-negative line remains PSA-negative following transfection with the control vector pCDNAI (Fig. 1B), as do cells transfected with the STX expression vector and stained with a negative control antibody (Fig. 1B). These results indicate that the human STX sequence can confer PSA expression in this N-CAM-positive cell line and are consistent with the conclusion that loss of PSA expression in this variant is a consequence of virtually complete loss of STX transcripts by these cells. It remains to be determined if this event occurs at the transcriptional or at the post-transcriptional level. The STX expression vector is also capable of generating cell surface PSA expression when introduced into the PSA-negative, N-CAM-positive murine cell line NIH-3T3 (Fig. 1B). This result demonstrates that the ability of STX to direct PSA expression is not idiosyncratic to the SCLC variant line and suggests that the catalytic specificity of human STX overlaps with that of hamster PST-1, which is also able to direct PSA expression in these cells(25) .

The bulk of PSA expression in mammalian tissues and cell lines is thought to be associated with N-CAM (9, 10, 36) and has been directly demonstrated on the SCLC cell line NCI-H69/F3(8) . These observations have been taken to mean that effective PSA synthesis and expression requires N-CAM, although PSA has also been detected in association with sodium channel alpha subunits(10) . To directly determine if STX-directed PSA expression involves a requirement for N-CAM, STX was expressed in N-CAM-negative (data not shown) COS-7 cells, and the transfectants were assayed for PSA expression. More than 25% of the STX-transfected COS-7 cells stained with the anti-PSA monoclonal antibody mAb 735, and at levels roughly comparable to the N-CAM-positive STX transfectants. Control COS-7 transfectants remained PSA-negative. Considered together, these results indicate that STX can also determined PSA expression in the absence of N-CAM expression.

The nature of the glycoconjugates that display STX-determined PSA on the cell lines we have used will require detailed structural analysis. Our experiments also do not allow us to know if STX participates in PSA expression as an ``initiase'' only (adds sialic acid in alpha(2,8) linkage to an alpha(2,3)-linked sialic acid precursor), or as a ``polymerase'' only (adds sialic acid in alpha(2,8) linkage to an alpha(2,8)-linked sialic acid precursor), or if both of these reactions are catalyzed by STX. A full biochemical resolution of this question, as it relates to STX, and to the other alpha(2,8)-sialyltransferases implicated in PSA expression, will require the development of an in vitro assay for PSA synthesis.


FOOTNOTES

*
This work was supported in part by Grants Bil 307 and Bil 444 (to E. P. S.) by the Swiss Cancer League. The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore by hereby marked ``advertisement'' in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.

The nucleotide sequence(s) reported in this paper has been submitted to the GenBank(TM)/EMBL Data Bank with accession number(s) U33551[GenBank].

§
To whom correspondence should be addressed: Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of Michigan Medical Center, MSRBI, Rm. 3510, 1150 W. Medical Center Dr., Ann Arbor, MI 48109-0650. Tel.: 313-747-4779; Fax: 313-936-1400.

Associate Investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.

(^1)
The abbreviations used are: PSA, polysialic acid; bp, base pair(s); SCLC, small cell lung carcinoma; N-CAM, neural cell adhesion molecule; RACE, rapid amplification of cDNA ends; kb, kilobase(s); mAb, monoclonal antibody.


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