Mutagenesis of N-Glycosylation Sites in the Human Vasoactive Intestinal Peptide 1 Receptor. Evidence That Asparagine 58 or 69 Is Crucial for Correct Delivery of the Receptor to Plasma Membrane
- 1 January 1996
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Biochemistry
- Vol. 35 (6) , 1745-1752
- https://doi.org/10.1021/bi952022h
Abstract
The functional role of N-linked carbohydrates in the human vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) 1 receptor was investigated by site-directed mutagenesis (Asn → Thr) of the four consensus N-glycosylation sites on Asn 58, Asn69, Asn100 (N-terminal extracellular domain) and Asn293 (second extracellular loop). Mutated receptors were investigated after transient expression in Cos-7 cells, by ligand binding assay, affinity cross-linking, western blotting, and confocal laser microscopy of epitope-tagged receptor proteins. Mutations of each consensus site revealed that Asn58, Asn69, and Asn100 were occupied by a 9-kDa N-linked carbohydrate whereas Asn293 was not used for glycosylation. Each mutated receptor was expressed (western blot) and delivered at the plasma membrane (confocal microscopy) of Cos-7 cells. They displayed a dissociation constant similar to that of the wild-type receptor, i.e., 0.5−1 nM. In contrast, no VIP binding to Cos-7 cells could be observed with the mutant devoid of consensus N-glycosylation sites due to a strict sequestration of this mutant in the perinuclear endoplasmic reticulum. However, when solubilized with a zwitterionic detergent, this mutant bound [125I]VIP specifically, indicating that it retained intrinsic binding activity. The construction of other mutants in which three out of four N-glycosylation sites were altered, demonstrated that N-glycosylation at either Asn58 or Asn69 is necessary and sufficient to ensure correct delivery of the receptor to the plasma membrane. Further pharmacological studies involving incubation of Cos-7 cells with castanospermine or deoxymannojirimycin immediately after transfection of mutated cDNAs encoding receptors with a single glycosylation site at Asn58 or Asn69 suggested that carbohydrate at Asn58 was involved in a calnexin-dependent folding process of the receptor whereas carbohydrate at Asn69 was not. These studies highlight the functional importance of the N-glycosylation of the human VIP 1 receptor which belongs to a new subfamily of seven membrane-spanning receptors.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Asparagine-linked oligosaccharides are localized to single extracytosolic segments in multi-span membrane glycoproteinsBiochemical Journal, 1994
- STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION OF G PROTEIN-COUPLED RECEPTORSAnnual Review of Biochemistry, 1994
- Gs and Gi protein subunits during cell differentiation in intestinal crypt-villus axis: regulation at the mRNA levelAmerican Journal of Physiology-Cell Physiology, 1992
- In vitro mutagenesis and the search for structure-function relationships among G protein-coupled receptorsBiochemical Journal, 1992
- Effect of inhibiting N-glycosylation or oligosaccharide processing on vasoactive intestinal peptide receptor binding activity and structureBiochemical Journal, 1991
- Development of vasoactive intestinal peptide-responsive adenylate cyclase during enterocytic differentiation of Caco-2 cells in culture. Evidence for an increased receptor level.Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1987
- TOPOGRAPHY OF GLYCOSYLATION IN THE ROUGH ENDOPLASMIC RETICULUM AND GOLGI APPARATUSAnnual Review of Biochemistry, 1987
- The vasoactive intestinal peptide receptor on intact human colonic adenocarcinoma cells (HT29-D4). Evidence for its glycoprotein natureBiochemical Journal, 1987
- Molecular identification and structural requirement of vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) receptors in the human colon adenocarcinoma cell line, HT-29Biochemical Journal, 1985
- Antibodies to the Golgi complex and the rough endoplasmic reticulum.The Journal of cell biology, 1982