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N-Glycosylation of Carnosinase Influences Protein Secretion and Enzyme Activity: Implications for Hyperglycemia

OBJECTIVE: The (CTG)(n) polymorphism in the serum carnosinase (CN-1) gene affects CN-1 secretion. Since CN-1 is heavily glycosylated and glycosylation might influence protein secretion as well, we tested the role of N-glycosylation for CN-1 secretion and enzyme activity. We also tested whether CN-1...

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Autores principales: Riedl, Eva, Koeppel, Hannes, Pfister, Frederick, Peters, Verena, Sauerhoefer, Sibylle, Sternik, Paula, Brinkkoetter, Paul, Zentgraf, Hanswalter, Navis, Gerjan, Henning, Robert H., Van Den Born, Jacob, Bakker, Stephan J.L., Janssen, Bart, van der Woude, Fokko J., Yard, Benito A.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Diabetes Association 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2911063/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20460427
http://dx.doi.org/10.2337/db09-0868
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author Riedl, Eva
Koeppel, Hannes
Pfister, Frederick
Peters, Verena
Sauerhoefer, Sibylle
Sternik, Paula
Brinkkoetter, Paul
Zentgraf, Hanswalter
Navis, Gerjan
Henning, Robert H.
Van Den Born, Jacob
Bakker, Stephan J.L.
Janssen, Bart
van der Woude, Fokko J.
Yard, Benito A.
author_facet Riedl, Eva
Koeppel, Hannes
Pfister, Frederick
Peters, Verena
Sauerhoefer, Sibylle
Sternik, Paula
Brinkkoetter, Paul
Zentgraf, Hanswalter
Navis, Gerjan
Henning, Robert H.
Van Den Born, Jacob
Bakker, Stephan J.L.
Janssen, Bart
van der Woude, Fokko J.
Yard, Benito A.
author_sort Riedl, Eva
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: The (CTG)(n) polymorphism in the serum carnosinase (CN-1) gene affects CN-1 secretion. Since CN-1 is heavily glycosylated and glycosylation might influence protein secretion as well, we tested the role of N-glycosylation for CN-1 secretion and enzyme activity. We also tested whether CN-1 secretion is changed under hyperglycemic conditions. RESULTS: N-glycosylation of CN-1 was either inhibited by tunicamycin in pCSII-CN-1–transfected Cos-7 cells or by stepwise deletion of its three putative N-glycosylation sites. CN-1 protein expression, N-glycosylation, and enzyme activity were assessed in cell extracts and supernatants. The influence of hyperglycemia on CN-1 enzyme activity in human serum was tested in homozygous (CTG)(5) diabetic patients and healthy control subjects. Tunicamycin completely inhibited CN-1 secretion. Deletion of all N-glycosylation sites was required to reduce CN-1 secretion efficiency. Enzyme activity was already diminished when two sites were deleted. In pCSII-CN-1–transfected Cos-7 cells cultured in medium containing 25 mmol/l d-glucose, the immature 61 kilodaltons (kDa) CN-1 immune reactive band was not detected. This was paralleled by an increased GlcNAc expression in cell lysates and CN-1 expression in the supernatants. Homozygous (CTG)(5) diabetic patients had significantly higher serum CN-1 activity compared with genotype-matched, healthy control subjects. CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that apart from the (CTG)(n) polymorphism in the signal peptide of CN-1, N-glycosylation is essential for appropriate secretion and enzyme activity. Since hyperglycemia enhances CN-1 secretion and enzyme activity, our data suggest that poor blood glucose control in diabetic patients might result in an increased CN-1 secretion even in the presence of the (CTG)(5) allele.
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spelling pubmed-29110632011-08-01 N-Glycosylation of Carnosinase Influences Protein Secretion and Enzyme Activity: Implications for Hyperglycemia Riedl, Eva Koeppel, Hannes Pfister, Frederick Peters, Verena Sauerhoefer, Sibylle Sternik, Paula Brinkkoetter, Paul Zentgraf, Hanswalter Navis, Gerjan Henning, Robert H. Van Den Born, Jacob Bakker, Stephan J.L. Janssen, Bart van der Woude, Fokko J. Yard, Benito A. Diabetes Pathophysiology OBJECTIVE: The (CTG)(n) polymorphism in the serum carnosinase (CN-1) gene affects CN-1 secretion. Since CN-1 is heavily glycosylated and glycosylation might influence protein secretion as well, we tested the role of N-glycosylation for CN-1 secretion and enzyme activity. We also tested whether CN-1 secretion is changed under hyperglycemic conditions. RESULTS: N-glycosylation of CN-1 was either inhibited by tunicamycin in pCSII-CN-1–transfected Cos-7 cells or by stepwise deletion of its three putative N-glycosylation sites. CN-1 protein expression, N-glycosylation, and enzyme activity were assessed in cell extracts and supernatants. The influence of hyperglycemia on CN-1 enzyme activity in human serum was tested in homozygous (CTG)(5) diabetic patients and healthy control subjects. Tunicamycin completely inhibited CN-1 secretion. Deletion of all N-glycosylation sites was required to reduce CN-1 secretion efficiency. Enzyme activity was already diminished when two sites were deleted. In pCSII-CN-1–transfected Cos-7 cells cultured in medium containing 25 mmol/l d-glucose, the immature 61 kilodaltons (kDa) CN-1 immune reactive band was not detected. This was paralleled by an increased GlcNAc expression in cell lysates and CN-1 expression in the supernatants. Homozygous (CTG)(5) diabetic patients had significantly higher serum CN-1 activity compared with genotype-matched, healthy control subjects. CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that apart from the (CTG)(n) polymorphism in the signal peptide of CN-1, N-glycosylation is essential for appropriate secretion and enzyme activity. Since hyperglycemia enhances CN-1 secretion and enzyme activity, our data suggest that poor blood glucose control in diabetic patients might result in an increased CN-1 secretion even in the presence of the (CTG)(5) allele. American Diabetes Association 2010-08 2010-05-11 /pmc/articles/PMC2911063/ /pubmed/20460427 http://dx.doi.org/10.2337/db09-0868 Text en © 2010 by the American Diabetes Association. Readers may use this article as long as the work is properly cited, the use is educational and not for profit, and the work is not altered. See http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ for details.
spellingShingle Pathophysiology
Riedl, Eva
Koeppel, Hannes
Pfister, Frederick
Peters, Verena
Sauerhoefer, Sibylle
Sternik, Paula
Brinkkoetter, Paul
Zentgraf, Hanswalter
Navis, Gerjan
Henning, Robert H.
Van Den Born, Jacob
Bakker, Stephan J.L.
Janssen, Bart
van der Woude, Fokko J.
Yard, Benito A.
N-Glycosylation of Carnosinase Influences Protein Secretion and Enzyme Activity: Implications for Hyperglycemia
title N-Glycosylation of Carnosinase Influences Protein Secretion and Enzyme Activity: Implications for Hyperglycemia
title_full N-Glycosylation of Carnosinase Influences Protein Secretion and Enzyme Activity: Implications for Hyperglycemia
title_fullStr N-Glycosylation of Carnosinase Influences Protein Secretion and Enzyme Activity: Implications for Hyperglycemia
title_full_unstemmed N-Glycosylation of Carnosinase Influences Protein Secretion and Enzyme Activity: Implications for Hyperglycemia
title_short N-Glycosylation of Carnosinase Influences Protein Secretion and Enzyme Activity: Implications for Hyperglycemia
title_sort n-glycosylation of carnosinase influences protein secretion and enzyme activity: implications for hyperglycemia
topic Pathophysiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2911063/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20460427
http://dx.doi.org/10.2337/db09-0868
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