4.4 Article

A method for assaying peptide: N-glycanase/N-glycanase 1 activities in crude extracts using an N-glycosylated cyclopeptide

Journal

GLYCOBIOLOGY
Volume 32, Issue 2, Pages 110-122

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/glycob/cwab115

Keywords

cyclopeptide; deglycosylation; NGLY1; NGLY1-defeciency; peptide; N-glycanase

Funding

  1. RIKEN Pioneering Research Project (Glyco-lipidologue Initiative)
  2. AMED-CREST [JP21gm14100003]

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The deficiency of cytosolic peptide N-glycanase (NGLY1) is a rare genetic disorder with common symptoms exhibited by patients, however, there is currently a lack of a reliable method to quantify NGLY1 activity.
Cytosolic peptide: N-glycanase (PNGase; NGLY1), an enzyme responsible for de-glycosylation of N-glycans on glycoproteins, is known to play pivotal roles in a variety of biological processes. In 2012, NGLY1 deficiency, a rare genetic disorder, was reported and since then, more than 100 patients have now been identified worldwide. Patients with this disease exhibit several common symptoms that are caused by the dysfunction of NGLY1. However, correlation between the severity of patient symptoms and the extent of the reduction in NGLY1 activity in these patients remains to be clarified, mainly due to the absence of a facile quantitative assay system for this enzyme, especially in a crude extract as an enzyme source. In this study, a quantitative, non-radioisotope (RI)-based assay method for measuring recombinant NGLY1 activity was established using a BODIPY-labeled asialoglycopeptide (BODIPY-ASGP) derived from hen eggs. With this assay, the activities of 27 recombinant NGLY1 mutants that are associated with the deficiency were examined. It was found that the activities of three (R469X, R458fs and H494fs) out of the 27 recombinant mutant proteins were 30-70% of the activities of wild-type NGLY1. We further developed a method for measuring endogenous NGLY1 activity in crude extracts derived from cultured cells, patients' fibroblasts, iPS cells or peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs), using a glycosylated cyclopeptide (GCP) that exhibited resistance to the endogenous proteases in the extract. Our methods will not only provide new insights into the molecular mechanism responsible for this disease but also promises to be applicable for its diagnosis.

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