| Literature DB >> 29187599 |
Elisabeth Gludovacz1,2, Daniel Maresch3, Leonor Lopes de Carvalho4, Verena Puxbaum1, Laurenz J Baier1, Leander Sützl5, Gabriela Guédez4, Clemens Grünwald-Gruber3, Barbara Ulm6, Sophie Pils6, Robin Ristl7, Friedrich Altmann3, Bernd Jilma2, Tiina A Salminen4, Nicole Borth8, Thomas Boehm9.
Abstract
N-Glycosylation plays a fundamental role in many biological processes. Human diamine oxidase (hDAO), required for histamine catabolism, has multiple N-glycosylation sites, but their roles, for example in DAO secretion, are unclear. We recently reported that the N-glycosylation sites Asn-168, Asn-538, and Asn-745 in recombinant hDAO (rhDAO) carry complex-type glycans, whereas Asn-110 carries only mammalian-atypical oligomannosidic glycans. Here, we show that Asn-110 in native hDAO from amniotic fluid and Caco-2 cells, DAO from porcine kidneys, and rhDAO produced in two different HEK293 cell lines is also consistently occupied by oligomannosidic glycans. Glycans at Asn-168 were predominantly sialylated with bi- to tetra-antennary branches, and Asn-538 and Asn-745 had similar complex-type glycans with some tissue- and cell line-specific variations. The related copper-containing amine oxidase human vascular adhesion protein-1 also exclusively displayed high-mannose glycosylation at Asn-137. X-ray structures revealed that the residues adjacent to Asn-110 and Asn-137 form a highly conserved hydrophobic cleft interacting with the core trisaccharide. Asn-110 replacement with Gln completely abrogated rhDAO secretion and caused retention in the endoplasmic reticulum. Mutations of Asn-168, Asn-538, and Asn-745 reduced rhDAO secretion by 13, 71, and 32%, respectively. Asn-538/745 double and Asn-168/538/745 triple substitutions reduced rhDAO secretion by 85 and 94%. Because of their locations in the DAO structure, Asn-538 and Asn-745 glycosylations might be important for efficient DAO dimer formation. These functional results are reflected in the high evolutionary conservation of all four glycosylation sites. Human DAO is abundant only in the gastrointestinal tract, kidney, and placenta, and glycosylation seems essential for reaching high enzyme expression levels in these tissues.Entities:
Keywords: evolutionary conservation; glycosylation; human diamine oxidase; mutation; protein expression; protein folding; protein misfolding; protein secretion
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29187599 PMCID: PMC5777248 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M117.814244
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.486