4.4 Article Proceedings Paper

Ganglioside depletion and EGF responses of human GM3 synthase-deficient fibroblasts

Journal

GLYCOBIOLOGY
Volume 18, Issue 8, Pages 593-601

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/glycob/cwn039

Keywords

GM3 synthase; ganglioside; EGF signaling; cell migration

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Recognition of important roles of gangliosides in normal and abnormal cell function has motivated pharmacological modi. cation of cellular ganglioside content. However, constitutive depletion of gangliosides in untransformed human cells has not been reported. In this context, the recent identification of a kindred carrying a point mutation in the GM3 synthase [ST3Gal5, Siat9] gene (Simpson MA, Cross H, Proukakis C, Priestman DA, Neville DC, Reinkensmeier G, Wang H, Wiznitzer M, Gurtz K, Verganelaki A, Pryde A, Patton MA, Dwek RA, Butters TD, Platt FM, Crosby AH. 2004. Infantile-onset symptomatic epilepsy syndrome caused by a homozygous loss-of-function mutation of GM3 synthase. Nat Genet. 36: 1225-1229) provided an opportunity to explore this possibility. We established primary cultures of skin fibroblasts of three patients homozygous for this autosomal recessive defect. They exhibited a 93% reduction in ganglioside content (0.8 +/- 0.2 nmol lipid-bound sialic acid per 10(7) cells versus 12.7 +/- 1.3 nmol per 10(7) normal. broblasts). Importantly, this marked reduction was not compensated by the activation of an alternate pathway of ganglioside synthesis, as occurs in murine GM3 synthase knockout. broblasts. Cell morphology appeared unaffected, but under stringent conditions EGF-induced proliferation and migration of the mutant. broblasts were reduced by 80% and 60%, respectively. Probing potential explanations, we found that EGF binding (effective membrane EGF receptor (EGFR) number) was reduced by 52% (to 6.2 +/- 1.9 from 12.8 +/- 2.0 pmol/10(8) normal. broblasts, P < 0.01), despite normal total EGFR protein. EGFR activation was likewise reduced as was EGF-induced Rho/Rac1 phosphorylation, which is associated with cell migration. We conclude that this GM3 synthase point mutation almost completely depletes human fibroblast cellular gangliosides, dampens membrane EGFR activation, and modulates related critical cell functions such as proliferation and migration. These cells offer a valuable model for the study of ganglioside modulation of cell function.

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