Abstract

The N-glycans of membrane glycoproteins are mainly exposed to the extracellular space. Human tyrosinase is a transmembrane glycoprotein with six or seven bulky N-glycans exposed towards the lumen of subcellular organelles. The central active site region of human tyrosinase is modeled here within less than 2.5 Å accuracy starting from Streptomyces castaneoglobisporus tyrosinase. The model accounts for the last five C-terminus glycosylation sites of which four are occupied and indicates that these cluster in two pairs - one in close vicinity to the active site and the other on the opposite side. We have analyzed and compared the roles of all tyrosinase N-glycans during tyrosinase processing with a special focus on the proximal to the active site N-glycans, s6:N337 and s7:N371, versus s3:N161 and s4:N230 which decorate the opposite side of the domain. To this end, we have constructed mutants of human tyrosinase in which its seven N-glycosylation sites were deleted. Ablation of the s6:N337 and s7:N371 sites arrests the post-translational productive folding process resulting in terminally misfolded mutants subjected to degradation through the mannosidase driven ERAD pathway. In contrast, single mutants of the other five N-glycans located either opposite to the active site or into the N-terminus Cys1 extension of tyrosinase are temperature-sensitive mutants and recover enzymatic activity at the permissive temperature of 31°C. Sites s3 and s4 display selective calreticulin binding properties. The C-terminus sites s7 and s6 are critical for the endoplasmic reticulum retention and intracellular disposal. Results herein suggest that individual N-glycan location is critical for the stability, regional folding control and secretion of human tyrosinase and explains some tyrosinase gene missense mutations associated with oculocutaneous albinism type I.

Highlights

  • N-glycosylation plays a pivotal role in glycoprotein maturation and functioning

  • The similarity is unevenly distributed and it clusters into two main sub-regions of 113aa and 154aa respectively, with over 30% identity and 60% homology, which are connected by a stretch of 36 aminoacids in human tyrosinase (hT), with 14 aa longer that its counterpart in Streptomyces castaneoglobisporus (sT)

  • The pair of N-glycans located in the proximity of the active site of human tyrosinase, s6:N337 and s7:N371, irreversibly influence its folding and degradation processes within the endoplasmic reticulum (ER)

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Summary

Introduction

Bulky N-glycans located at the surface of secretory and cell membrane glycoproteins molecules are mostly exposed to the extracellular space These oligosaccharides serve multiple functions acting mainly as stabilizers and protective shields for the glycoprotein outside the cell and as recognition targets in adhesion and immune response modulation. Intracellular membrane glycoproteins facing the lumen of the subcellular organelles may be heavily glycosylated suggesting specific functions within the cell. The roles of these oligosaccharides in controlling intracellular processes such as folding, sorting and traffic of proteins have been extensively investigated (reviewed in [1,2]). In the absence of a comprehensive analysis of human tyrosinase glycosylation, the study suggested that conserved sites may perform various functions

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