Regulation of homotypic cell-cell adhesion by branched N-glycosylation of N-cadherin extracellular EC2 and EC3 domains.

J Biol Chem

Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Complex Carbohydrate Research Center, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30605, USA.

Published: December 2009

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how altering the N-glycosylation of N-cadherin affects cell behaviors like adhesion, migration, and invasion in cancer cells using techniques like small interfering RNA and site-directed mutagenesis.
  • Knockdown of GnT-V led to reduced beta(1,6)-branched glycans on N-cadherin, enhancing cell-cell adhesion while decreasing cell migration and invasion.
  • Three specific N-glycosylation sites were identified that influence N-cadherin's ability to form cell contacts and engage in signaling, suggesting that changes in N-glycosylation can significantly impact the invasive characteristics of cancer cells.

Article Abstract

The effects of altering N-cadherin N-glycosylation on several cadherin-mediated cellular behaviors were investigated using small interfering RNA and site-directed mutagenesis. In HT1080 fibrosarcoma cells, small interfering RNA-directed knockdown of N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase V (GnT-V), a glycosyltransferase up-regulated by oncogene signaling, caused decreased expression of N-linked beta(1,6)-branched glycans expressed on N-cadherin, resulting in enhanced N-cadherin-mediated cell-cell adhesion, but had no effect on N-cadherin expression on the cell surface. This effect on adhesion was accompanied by decreased cell migration and invasion, opposite of the effects observed when GnT-V was overexpressed in these cells (Guo, H. B., Lee, I., Kamar, M., and Pierce, M. (2003) J. Biol. Chem. 278, 52412-52424). A detailed study using site-directed mutagenesis demonstrated that three of the eight putative N-glycosylation sites in the N-cadherin sequence showed N-glycan expression. Moreover, all three of these sites, located in the extracellular domains EC2 and EC3, were shown by leucoagglutinating phytohemagglutinin binding to express at least some beta(1,6)-branched glycans, products of GnT-V activity. Deletion of these sites had no effect on cadherin levels on the cell surface but led to increased stabilization of cell-cell contacts, cell-cell adhesion- mediated intracellular signaling, and reduced cell migration. We show for the first time that these deletions had little effect on formation of the N-cadherin-catenin complex but instead resulted in increased N-cadherin cis-dimerization. Branched N-glycan expression at three sites in the EC2 and -3 domains regulates N-cadherin-mediated cell-cell contact formation, outside-in signaling, and cell migration and is probably a significant contributor to the increase in the migratory/invasive phenotype of cancer cells that results when GnT-V activity is up-regulated by oncogene signaling.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2787361PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M109.060806DOI Listing

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