The β-Subunit (AMOG) of Human Na, K-ATPase Is a Homophilic Adhesion Molecule.

Int J Mol Sci

Department of Physiology, Biophysics and Neurosciences, CINVESTAV-IPN, 2508 IPN Ave., San Pedro Zacatenco, Ciudad de México 07360, Mexico.

Published: July 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • The β subunit of Na, K-ATPase, also known as AMOG, plays a key role in the adhesion of astrocytes to neurons and influences neuronal development but its interaction mechanisms have not been fully understood.
  • Research conducted through various assays indicates that the β subunit can form stable dimers between adjacent cells, implying that it functions as a homophilic adhesion molecule.
  • Experiments show that transfected CHO fibroblasts exhibit increased adhesion and aggregation in a manner that relies on N-glycans, indicating that the β subunit interacts with itself on the surface of different cell types.

Article Abstract

The β subunit of Na, K-ATPase was originally identified as the adhesion molecule on glia (AMOG) that mediates the adhesion of astrocytes to neurons in the central nervous system and that is implicated in the regulation of neurite outgrowth and neuronal migration. While β isoform have been shown to trans-interact in a species-specific mode with the β subunit on the epithelial neighboring cell, the β subunit has been shown to act as a recognition molecule on the glia. Nevertheless, none of the works have identified the binding partner of β or described its adhesion mechanism. Until now, the interactions pronounced for β/AMOG are heterophilic cis-interactions. In the present report we designed experiments that would clarify whether β is a cell-cell homophilic adhesion molecule. For this purpose, we performed protein docking analysis, cell-cell aggregation, and protein-protein interaction assays. We observed that the glycosylated extracellular domain of β/AMOG can make an energetically stable trans-interacting dimer. We show that CHO (Chinese Hamster Ovary) fibroblasts transfected with the human β subunit become more adhesive and make large aggregates. The treatment with Tunicamycin in vivo reduced cell aggregation, suggesting the participation of N-glycans in that process. Protein-protein interaction assay in vivo with MDCK (Madin-Darby canine kidney) or CHO cells expressing a recombinant β subunit show that the β subunits on the cell surface of the transfected cell lines interact with each other. Overall, our results suggest that the human β subunit can form trans-dimers between neighboring cells when expressed in non-astrocytic cells, such as fibroblasts (CHO) and epithelial cells (MDCK).

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9322774PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms23147753DOI Listing

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