Abstract

Human carcinoembryonic antigen-related cell adhesion molecule 1 (C?/Au: EACAM1) is a cell-surface signaling molecule involved in cell adhesion, proliferation, and immune response. It is also implicated in cancer angiogenesis, progression, and metastasis. This diverse set of effects likely arises as a result of the numerous homophilic and heterophilic interactions that CEACAM1 can have with itself and other molecules. Its N-terminal Ig variable (IgV) domain has been suggested to be a principal player in these interactions. Previous crystal structures of the β-sandwich-like IgV domain have been produced using Escherichia coli-expressed material, which lacks native glycosylation. These have led to distinctly different proposals for dimer interfaces, one involving interactions of ABED β-strands and the other involving GFCC'C″ β-strands, with the former burying one prominent glycosylation site. These structures raise questions as to which form may exist in solution and what the effect of glycosylation may have on this form. Here, we use NMR cross-correlation measurements to examine the effect of glycosylation on CEACAM1-IgV dimerization and use residual dipolar coupling (RDC) measurements to characterize the solution structure of the non-glycosylated form. Our findings demonstrate that even addition of a single N-linked GlcNAc at potential glycosylation sites inhibits dimer formation. Surprisingly, RDC data collected on E. coli expressed material in solution indicate that a dimer using the non-glycosylated GFCC'C″ interface is preferred even in the absence of glycosylation. The results open new questions about what other factors may facilitate dimerization of CEACAM1 in vivo, and what roles glycosylation may play in heterophylic interactions.

Highlights

  • Cer angiogenesis, progression, and metastasis [3]

  • There are crystal structures of the Ig variable (IgV) domain expressed in Escherichia coli, which have led to the suggestion of two distinct dimerization interfaces [24, 25]

  • Our findings demonstrate that the non-glycosylated form exists as a dimer involving the GFCCЈCЉ interface in solution, but minimal glycosylation inhibits all types of dimerization

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Summary

Introduction

Cer angiogenesis, progression, and metastasis [3]. it is known that CEACAM1 is a negative-regulator of cell proliferation and is down-regulated in some tumor cells (4 –10). B, the cross-correlation time (␶C) of assigned non-glycosylated CEACAM1-Igv residues.

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