4.8 Article

Galectin-3 N-terminal tail prolines modulate cell activity and glycan-mediated oligomerization/ phase separation

出版社

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2021074118

关键词

galectin-3; proline-rich protein; phase separation; oligomerization; glycan

资金

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31870796, 31770852]
  2. Scientific and Technologic Foundation of Jilin Province [20190304082YY]
  3. National Science and Technology Major Project Key New Drug Creation and Manufacturing Program, China [2019ZX09735001]
  4. NSF [BIR-961477]
  5. University of Minnesota Medical School
  6. Minnesota Medical Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Gal-3's N-terminal tail with proline-rich residues plays a crucial role in mediating various cellular activities, affecting cell migration, activation, endocytosis, and hemagglutination. The research also reveals the significant impact of prolines in regulating Gal-3 oligomerization process.
Galectin-3 (Gal-3) has a long, aperiodic, and dynamic proline-rich N-terminal tail (NT). The functional role of the NT with its numerous prolines has remained enigmatic since its discovery. To provide some resolution to this puzzle, we individually mutated all 14 NT prolines over the first 68 residues and assessed their effects on various Gal-3-mediated functions. Our findings show that mutation of any single proline (especially P37A, P55A, P60A, P64A/H, and P67A) dramatically and differentially inhibits Gal-3-mediated cellular activities (i.e., cell migration, activation, endocytosis, and hemagglutination). For mechanistic insight, we investigated the role of prolines in mediating Gal-3 oligomerization, a fundamental process required for these cell activities. We showed that Gal-3 oligomerization triggered by binding to glycoproteins is a dynamic process analogous to liquid-liquid phase separation (LLPS). The composition of these heterooligomers is dependent on the concentration of Gal-3 as well as on the concentration and type of glycoprotein. LLPS-like Gal-3 oligomerization/condensation was also observed on the plasma membrane and disrupted endomembranes. Molecular-and cell-based assays indicate that glycan binding-triggered Gal-3 LLPS (or LLPS-like) is driven mainly by dynamic intermolecular interactions between the Gal-3 NT and the carbohydrate recognition domain (CRD) F-face, although NT-NT interactions appear to contribute to a lesser extent. Mutation of each proline within the NT differentially controls NT-CRD interactions, consequently affecting glycan binding, LLPS, and cellular activities. Our results unveil the role of proline polymorphisms (e.g., at P64) associated with many diseases and suggest that the function of glycosylated cell surface receptors is dynamically regulated by Gal-3.

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