| Literature DB >> 35603428 |
Mizuki Ishida1, Yuta Maki2,3, Akinori Ninomiya4, Yoko Takada5, Philippe Campeau6, Taroh Kinoshita1,5,7, Yoshiko Murakami1,5.
Abstract
Glycosylphosphatidylinositols (GPIs) are glycolipids that anchor many proteins (GPI-APs) on the cell surface. The core glycan of GPI precursor has three mannoses, which in mammals, are all modified by ethanolamine-phosphate (EthN-P). It is postulated that EthN-P on the third mannose (EthN-P-Man3) is the bridge between GPI and the protein and the second (EthN-P-Man2) is removed after GPI-protein attachment. However, EthN-P-Man2 may not be always transient, as mutations of PIGG, the enzyme that transfers EthN-P to Man2, result in inherited GPI deficiencies (IGDs), characterized by neuronal dysfunctions. Here, we show that EthN-P on Man2 is the preferential bridge in some GPI-APs, among them, the Ect-5'-nucleotidase and Netrin G2. We find that CD59, a GPI-AP, is attached via EthN-P-Man2 both in PIGB-knockout cells, in which GPI lacks Man3, and with a small fraction in wild-type cells. Our findings modify the current view of GPI anchoring and provide a mechanistic basis for IGDs caused by PIGG mutations.Entities:
Keywords: CD73; PIGB; PIGG; inherited GPI deficiency; mass spectrometry
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35603428 PMCID: PMC9253782 DOI: 10.15252/embr.202154352
Source DB: PubMed Journal: EMBO Rep ISSN: 1469-221X Impact factor: 9.071