4.6 Article

Low Density Lipoprotein Receptor Class A Repeats Are O-Glycosylated in Linker Regions

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 289, Issue 25, Pages 17312-17324

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M113.545053

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Kirsten og Freddy Johansen Fonden
  2. A.P. Moller og Hustru Chastine Mc-Kinney Mollers Fond til Almene Formaal
  3. Carlsberg Foundation
  4. Novo Nordisk Foundation
  5. Danish Research Councils, a program of excellence from the University of Copenhagen
  6. Danish National Research Foundation [DNRF107]
  7. Canada Chair Grants [216684]
  8. CIHR [102741]

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The low density lipoprotein receptor (LDLR) is crucial for cholesterol homeostasis and deficiency in LDLR functions cause hypercholesterolemia. LDLR is a type I transmembrane protein that requires O-glycosylation for stable expression at the cell surface. It has previously been suggested that LDLR O-glycosylation is found N-terminal to the juxtamembrane region. Recently we identified O-glycosylation sites in the linker regions between the characteristic LDLR class A repeats in several LDLR-related receptors using the SimpleCell O-glycoproteome shotgun strategy. Herein, we have systematically characterized O-glycosylation sites on recombinant LDLR shed from HEK293 SimpleCells and CHO wild-typecells. We find that the short linker regions between LDLR class A repeats contain an evolutionarily conserved O-glycosylation site at position-1 of the first cysteine residue of most repeats, which in wild-type CHO cells is glycosylated with the typical sialylated core 1 structure. The glycosites in linker regions of LDLR class A repeats are conserved in LDLR from man to Xenopus and found in other homologous receptors. O-Glycosylation is controlled by a large family of polypeptide GalNAc transferases. Probing into which isoform(s) contributed to glycosylation of the linker regions of the LDLR class A repeats by in vitro enzyme assays suggested a major role of GalNAc-T11. This was supported by expression of LDLR in HEK293 cells, where knock-out of the GalNAc-T11 isoform resulted in the loss of glycosylation of three of four linker regions.

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