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N‐linked glycosylation of a subunit isoforms is critical for vertebrate vacuolar H + ‐ATPase (V‐ATPase) biosynthesis
Author(s) -
Esmail Sally,
Kartner Norbert,
Yao Yeqi,
Kim Joo Wan,
Reithmeier Reinhart A.F.,
Manolson Morris F.
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of cellular biochemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.028
H-Index - 165
eISSN - 1097-4644
pISSN - 0730-2312
DOI - 10.1002/jcb.26250
Subject(s) - glycosylation , gene isoform , protein subunit , immunoprecipitation , biology , n linked glycosylation , hek 293 cells , microbiology and biotechnology , biochemistry , glycoprotein , gene , glycan
The a subunit of the V 0 membrane‐integrated sector of human V‐ATPase has four isoforms, a1 ‐ a4 , with diverse and crucial functions in health and disease. They are encoded by four conserved paralogous genes, and their vertebrate orthologs have positionally conserved N‐glycosylation sequons within the second extracellular loop, EL2, of the a subunit membrane domain. Previously, we have shown directly that the predicted sequon for the a4 isoform is indeed N‐glycosylated. Here we extend our investigation to the other isoforms by transiently transfecting HEK 293 cells to express cDNA constructs of epitope‐tagged human a1 ‐ a3 subunits, with or without mutations that convert Asn to Gln at putative N‐glycosylation sites. Expression and N‐glycosylation were characterized by immunoblotting and mobility shifts after enzymatic deglycosylation, and intracellular localization was determined using immunofluorescence microscopy. All unglycosylated mutants, where predicted N‐glycosylation sites had been eliminated by sequon mutagenesis, showed increased relative mobility on immunoblots, identical to what was seen for wild‐type a subunits after enzymatic deglycosylation. Cycloheximide‐chase experiments showed that unglycosylated subunits were turned over at a higher rate than N‐glycosylated forms by degradation in the proteasomal pathway. Immunofluorescence colocalization analysis showed that unglycosylated a subunits were retained in the ER, and co‐immunoprecipitation studies showed that they were unable to associate with the V‐ATPase assembly chaperone, VMA21. Taken together with our previous a4 subunit studies, these observations show that N‐glycosylation is crucial in all four human V‐ATPase a subunit isoforms for protein stability and ultimately for functional incorporation into V‐ATPase complexes.

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