Domains known as von Willebrand factor type D (VWD) are found in extracellular and cell-surface proteins including von Willebrand factor, mucins, and various signaling molecules and receptors. Many VWD domains have a glycine-aspartate-proline-histidine (GDPH) amino-acid sequence motif, which is hydrolytically cleaved post-translationally between the aspartate (Asp) and proline (Pro). The Fc IgG binding protein (FCGBP), found in intestinal mucus secretions and other extracellular environments, contains 13 VWD domains, 11 of which have a GDPH cleavage site.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAberrant expression of transmembrane mucins promotes tumor progression and interferes with immunological and medicinal elimination of cancer cells. In a recent article, Pedram et al. directed an attenuated bacterial mucin-specific protease to HER2-positive tumor cells and observed decreased tumor growth rates and extended survival of mice bearing HER2-positive tumors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFConventional methods for humanizing animal-derived antibodies involve grafting their complementarity-determining regions onto homologous human framework regions. However, this process can substantially lower antibody stability and antigen-binding affinity, and requires iterative mutational fine-tuning to recover the original antibody properties. Here we report a computational method for the systematic grafting of animal complementarity-determining regions onto thousands of human frameworks.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCysD domains are disulfide-rich modules embedded within long O-glycosylated regions of mucin glycoproteins. CysD domains are thought to mediate intermolecular adhesion during the intracellular bioassembly of mucin polymers and perhaps also after secretion in extracellular mucus hydrogels. The human genome encodes 18 CysD domains distributed across three different mucins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Opin Struct Biol
April 2023
Contrary to first appearances, mucus structural biology is not an oxymoron. Though mucus hydrogels derive their characteristics largely from intrinsically disordered, heavily glycosylated polypeptide segments, the secreted mucin glycoproteins that constitute mucus undergo an orderly assembly process controlled by folded domains at their termini. Recent structural studies revealed how mucin complexes promote disulphide-mediated polymerization to produce the mucus gel scaffold.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMucus is made of enormous mucin glycoproteins that polymerize by disulfide crosslinking in the Golgi apparatus. QSOX1 is a catalyst of disulfide bond formation localized to the Golgi. Both QSOX1 and mucins are highly expressed in goblet cells of mucosal tissues, leading to the hypothesis that QSOX1 catalyzes disulfide-mediated mucin polymerization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFormation of disulfide bonds in secreted and cell-surface proteins involves numerous enzymes and chaperones abundant in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), the first and main site for disulfide bonding in the secretory pathway. Although the Golgi apparatus is the major station after the ER, little is known about thiol-based redox activity in this compartment. QSOX1 and its paralog QSOX2 are the only known Golgi-resident enzymes catalyzing disulfide bonding.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMucus protects the epithelial cells of the digestive and respiratory tracts from pathogens and other hazards. Progress in determining the molecular mechanisms of mucus barrier function has been limited by the lack of high-resolution structural information on mucins, the giant, secreted, gel-forming glycoproteins that are the major constituents of mucus. Here, we report how mucin structures we determined enabled the discovery of an unanticipated protective role of mucus: managing the toxic transition metal copper.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe von Willebrand factor (VWF) glycoprotein is stored in tubular form in Weibel-Palade bodies (WPBs) before secretion from endothelial cells into the bloodstream. The organization of VWF in the tubules promotes formation of covalently linked VWF polymers and enables orderly secretion without polymer tangling. Recent studies have described the high-resolution structure of helical tubular cores formed in vitro by the D1D2 and D'D3 amino-terminal protein segments of VWF.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
April 2022
The glycoprotein von Willebrand factor (VWF) contributes to hemostasis by stanching injuries in blood vessel walls. A distinctive feature of VWF is its assembly into long, helical tubules in endothelial cells prior to secretion. When VWF is released into the bloodstream, these tubules unfurl to release linear polymers that bind subendothelial collagen at wound sites, recruit platelets, and initiate the clotting cascade.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the parasite Trypanosoma brucei, the causative agent of human African sleeping sickness, all mRNAs are -spliced to generate a common 5' exon derived from the spliced leader (SL) RNA. Perturbations of protein translocation across the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) induce the spliced leader RNA silencing (SLS) pathway. SLS activation is mediated by a serine-threonine kinase, PK3, which translocates from the cytosolic face of the ER to the nucleus, where it phosphorylates the TATA-binding protein TRF4, leading to the shutoff of SL RNA transcription, followed by induction of programmed cell death.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZymogen granule membrane protein 16 (ZG16) is produced in organs that secrete large quantities of enzymes and other proteins into the digestive tract. ZG16 binds microbial pathogens, and lower ZG16 expression levels correlate with colorectal cancer, but the physiological function of the protein is poorly understood. One prominent attribute of ZG16 is its ability to bind glycans, but other aspects of the protein may also contribute to activity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
November 2020
The complex environment of biological cells and tissues has motivated development of three-dimensional (3D) imaging in both light and electron microscopies. To this end, one of the primary tools in fluorescence microscopy is that of computational deconvolution. Wide-field fluorescence images are often corrupted by haze due to out-of-focus light, i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe respiratory and intestinal tracts are exposed to physical and biological hazards accompanying the intake of air and food. Likewise, the vasculature is threatened by inflammation and trauma. Mucin glycoproteins and the related von Willebrand factor guard the vulnerable cell layers in these diverse systems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe post-translational oxidation of methionine to methionine sulfoxide (MetSO) is a reversible process, enabling the repair of oxidative damage to proteins and the use of sulfoxidation as a regulatory switch. MetSO reductases catalyze the stereospecific reduction of MetSO. One of the mammalian MetSO reductases, MsrB3, has a signal sequence for entry into the endoplasmic reticulum (ER).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is a highly dynamic network of membranes. Here, we combine live-cell microscopy with in situ cryo-electron tomography to directly visualize ER dynamics in several secretory cell types including pancreatic β-cells and neurons under near-native conditions. Using these imaging approaches, we identify a novel, mobile form of ER, ribosome-associated vesicles (RAVs), found primarily in the cell periphery, which is conserved across different cell types and species.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExtracellular matrix (ECM) plays an important role in tumor development and dissemination, but few points of therapeutic intervention targeting ECM of the tumor microenvironment have been exploited to date. Recent observations suggest that the enzymatic introduction of disulfide bond cross-links into the ECM may be modulated to affect cancer progression. Specifically, the disulfide bond-forming activity of the enzyme Quiescin sulfhydryl oxidase 1 (QSOX1) is required by fibroblasts to assemble ECM components for adhesion and migration of cancer cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCells and extracellular matrix (ECM) are mutually interdependent: cells guide self-assembly of ECM precursors, and the resulting ECM architecture supports and instructs cells. Though bidirectional signaling between ECM and cells is fundamental to cell biology, it is challenging to gain high-resolution structural information on cellular responses to the matrix microenvironment. Here we used cryo-scanning transmission electron tomography (CSTET) to reveal the nanometer- to micron-scale organization of major fibroblast ECM components in a native-like context, while simultaneously visualizing internal cell ultrastructure including organelles and cytoskeleton.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAntibodies developed for research and clinical applications may exhibit suboptimal stability, expressibility, or affinity. Existing optimization strategies focus on surface mutations, whereas natural affinity maturation also introduces mutations in the antibody core, simultaneously improving stability and affinity. To systematically map the mutational tolerance of an antibody variable fragment (Fv), we performed yeast display and applied deep mutational scanning to an anti-lysozyme antibody and found that many of the affinity-enhancing mutations clustered at the variable light-heavy chain interface, within the antibody core.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFATF6 is a major signal transducer for cellular reprogramming in response to protein mis-folding in the endoplasmic reticulum. However, the mechanism by which ATF6 senses unfolded proteins and becomes activated is not yet known. In this issue of The EMBO Journal, Oka et al show that ERp18, a single-domain member of the protein disulfide isomerase family, interacts preferentially with ATF6 under stress conditions and regulates ATF6 transport to the Golgi apparatus.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe mucin 2 glycoprotein assembles into a complex hydrogel that protects intestinal epithelia and houses the gut microbiome. A major step in mucin 2 assembly is further multimerization of preformed mucin dimers, thought to produce a honeycomb-like arrangement upon hydrogel expansion. Important open questions are how multiple mucin 2 dimers become covalently linked to one another and how mucin 2 multimerization compares with analogous processes in related polymers such as respiratory tract mucins and the hemostasis protein von Willebrand factor.
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