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ERO1 alpha deficiency impairs angiogenesis by increasing N-glycosylation of a proangiogenic VEGFA

N-glycosylation and disulfide bond formation are two essential steps in protein folding that occur in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and reciprocally influence each other. Here, to analyze crosstalk between N-glycosylation and oxidation, we investigated how the protein disulfide oxidase ERO1-alpha a...

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Autores principales: Varone, Ersilia, Chernorudskiy, Alexander, Cherubini, Alessandro, Cattaneo, Angela, Bachi, Angela, Fumagalli, Stefano, Erol, Gizem, Gobbi, Marco, Lenardo, Michael J., Borgese, Nica, Zito, Ester
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9463388/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36063727
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.redox.2022.102455
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author Varone, Ersilia
Chernorudskiy, Alexander
Cherubini, Alessandro
Cattaneo, Angela
Bachi, Angela
Fumagalli, Stefano
Erol, Gizem
Gobbi, Marco
Lenardo, Michael J.
Borgese, Nica
Zito, Ester
author_facet Varone, Ersilia
Chernorudskiy, Alexander
Cherubini, Alessandro
Cattaneo, Angela
Bachi, Angela
Fumagalli, Stefano
Erol, Gizem
Gobbi, Marco
Lenardo, Michael J.
Borgese, Nica
Zito, Ester
author_sort Varone, Ersilia
collection PubMed
description N-glycosylation and disulfide bond formation are two essential steps in protein folding that occur in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and reciprocally influence each other. Here, to analyze crosstalk between N-glycosylation and oxidation, we investigated how the protein disulfide oxidase ERO1-alpha affects glycosylation of the angiogenic VEGF(121), a key regulator of vascular homeostasis. ERO1 deficiency, while retarding disulfide bond formation in VEGF(121), increased utilization of its single N-glycosylation sequon, which lies close to an intra-polypeptide disulfide bridge, and concomitantly slowed its secretion. Unbiased mass-spectrometric analysis revealed interactions between VEGF(121) and N-glycosylation pathway proteins in ERO1-knockout (KO), but not wild-type cells. Notably, MAGT1, a thioredoxin-containing component of the post-translational oligosaccharyltransferase complex, was a major hit exclusive to ERO1-deficient cells. Thus, both a reduced rate of formation of disulfide bridges, and the increased trapping potential of MAGT1 may increase N-glycosylation of VEGF(121). Extending our investigation to tissues, we observed altered lectin staining of ERO1 KO breast tumor xenografts, implicating ERO1 as a physiologic regulator of protein N-glycosylation. Our study, highlighting the effect of ERO1 loss on N-glycosylation of proteins, is particularly relevant not only to angiogenesis but also to other cancer patho-mechanisms in light of recent findings suggesting a close causal link between alterations in protein glycosylation and cancer development.
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spelling pubmed-94633882022-09-11 ERO1 alpha deficiency impairs angiogenesis by increasing N-glycosylation of a proangiogenic VEGFA Varone, Ersilia Chernorudskiy, Alexander Cherubini, Alessandro Cattaneo, Angela Bachi, Angela Fumagalli, Stefano Erol, Gizem Gobbi, Marco Lenardo, Michael J. Borgese, Nica Zito, Ester Redox Biol Research Paper N-glycosylation and disulfide bond formation are two essential steps in protein folding that occur in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and reciprocally influence each other. Here, to analyze crosstalk between N-glycosylation and oxidation, we investigated how the protein disulfide oxidase ERO1-alpha affects glycosylation of the angiogenic VEGF(121), a key regulator of vascular homeostasis. ERO1 deficiency, while retarding disulfide bond formation in VEGF(121), increased utilization of its single N-glycosylation sequon, which lies close to an intra-polypeptide disulfide bridge, and concomitantly slowed its secretion. Unbiased mass-spectrometric analysis revealed interactions between VEGF(121) and N-glycosylation pathway proteins in ERO1-knockout (KO), but not wild-type cells. Notably, MAGT1, a thioredoxin-containing component of the post-translational oligosaccharyltransferase complex, was a major hit exclusive to ERO1-deficient cells. Thus, both a reduced rate of formation of disulfide bridges, and the increased trapping potential of MAGT1 may increase N-glycosylation of VEGF(121). Extending our investigation to tissues, we observed altered lectin staining of ERO1 KO breast tumor xenografts, implicating ERO1 as a physiologic regulator of protein N-glycosylation. Our study, highlighting the effect of ERO1 loss on N-glycosylation of proteins, is particularly relevant not only to angiogenesis but also to other cancer patho-mechanisms in light of recent findings suggesting a close causal link between alterations in protein glycosylation and cancer development. Elsevier 2022-08-27 /pmc/articles/PMC9463388/ /pubmed/36063727 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.redox.2022.102455 Text en © 2022 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Research Paper
Varone, Ersilia
Chernorudskiy, Alexander
Cherubini, Alessandro
Cattaneo, Angela
Bachi, Angela
Fumagalli, Stefano
Erol, Gizem
Gobbi, Marco
Lenardo, Michael J.
Borgese, Nica
Zito, Ester
ERO1 alpha deficiency impairs angiogenesis by increasing N-glycosylation of a proangiogenic VEGFA
title ERO1 alpha deficiency impairs angiogenesis by increasing N-glycosylation of a proangiogenic VEGFA
title_full ERO1 alpha deficiency impairs angiogenesis by increasing N-glycosylation of a proangiogenic VEGFA
title_fullStr ERO1 alpha deficiency impairs angiogenesis by increasing N-glycosylation of a proangiogenic VEGFA
title_full_unstemmed ERO1 alpha deficiency impairs angiogenesis by increasing N-glycosylation of a proangiogenic VEGFA
title_short ERO1 alpha deficiency impairs angiogenesis by increasing N-glycosylation of a proangiogenic VEGFA
title_sort ero1 alpha deficiency impairs angiogenesis by increasing n-glycosylation of a proangiogenic vegfa
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9463388/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36063727
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.redox.2022.102455
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