N-linked glycosylation selectively regulates the generic folding of HLA-Cw1.

Article Details

Citation

Martayan A, Sibilio L, Setini A, Lo Monaco E, Tremante E, Fruci D, Colonna M, Giacomini P

N-linked glycosylation selectively regulates the generic folding of HLA-Cw1.

J Biol Chem. 2008 Jun 13;283(24):16469-76. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M709175200. Epub 2008 Apr 17.

PubMed ID
18420581 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

To resolve primary (glycosylation-assisted) from secondary (glycosylation-independent) quality control steps in the biosynthesis of HLA (human leukocyte antigen) class I glycoproteins, the unique N-linked glycosylation site of the HLA-Cw1 heavy chain was deleted by site-directed mutagenesis. The non-glycosylated Cw1S88G mutant was characterized by flow cytometry, pulse-chase, co-immunoprecipitation, and in vitro assembly assays with synthetic peptide ligands upon transfection in 721.221 and 721.220 cells. The former provide a full set of primary as well as secondary chaperoning interactions, whereas the latter are unable to perform secondary quality control (e.g. proper class I assembly with peptide antigens) as a result of a functional defect of the HLA-dedicated chaperone tapasin. In both transfectants, Cw1S88G displayed a loss/weakening in its generic chaperoning interaction with calreticulin and/or ERp57 and became redistributed toward calnexin, known to bind the most unfolded class I conformers. Despite this, and quite unexpectedly, a weak interaction with the HLA-dedicated chaperone TAP was selectively retained in 721.221. In addition, the ordered, stepwise acquisition of thermal stability/peptide binding was disrupted, resulting in a heterogeneous ensemble of Cw1S88G conformers with unorthodox and unprecedented peptide assembly features. Because a lack of glycosylation and a lack of tapasin-assisted peptide loading have distinct, complementary, and additive effects, the former is separable from (and upstream of) the latter, e.g. primary quality control is suggested to supervise a crucial, generic folding step preliminary to the acquisition of peptide receptivity.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
HLA class I histocompatibility antigen, C alpha chainP10321Details