Abstract

Glycogenin is a self-glucosylating protein involved in the initiation of glycogen biosynthesis. Self-glucosylation leads to the formation of an oligosaccharide chain, which, when long enough, supports the action of glycogen synthase to elongate it and form a mature glycogen molecule. To identify possible regulators of glycogenin, the yeast two-hybrid strategy was employed. By using rabbit skeletal muscle glycogenin as a bait, cDNAs encoding three different proteins were isolated from the human skeletal muscle cDNA library. Two of the cDNAs encoded glycogenin and glycogen synthase, respectively, proteins known to be interactors. The third cDNA encoded a polypeptide of unknown function and was designated GNIP (glycogenin interacting protein). Northern blot analysis revealed that GNIP mRNA is highly expressed in skeletal muscle. The gene for GNIP generates at least four isoforms by alternative splicing. The largest isoform GNIP1 contains, from NH(2)- to COOH-terminal, a RING finger, a B box, a putative coiled-coil region, and a B30.2-like motif. The previously identified protein TRIM7 (tripartite motif containing protein 7) is also derived from the GNIP gene and is composed of the RING finger, B box, and coiled-coil regions. The GNIP2 and GNIP3 isoforms consist of the coiled-coil region and B30.2-like domain. Physical interaction between GNIP2 and glycogenin was confirmed by co-immunoprecipitation, and in addition GNIP2 was shown to stimulate glycogenin self-glucosylation 3-4-fold. GNIPs may represent a novel participant in the initiation of glycogen synthesis.

Highlights

  • The biosynthesis of glycogen involves two distinguishable stages

  • Screening for Glycogenin-1-binding Proteins Using the Twohybrid System—To search for cDNA clones encoding proteins that interact with glycogenin-1, we fused the coding sequence for rabbit skeletal muscle glycogenin with the Gal4p DNA binding domain and screened a human skeletal muscle library expressed from the pGAD-10 vector

  • The sizes of the isolated cDNAs exceed the lengths of coding regions for glycogen synthase and glycogenin indicating that both polypeptides are expressed in yeast as full-length proteins, with a segment of the fusion protein coded by the 5Ј-UTR

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Summary

Introduction

The biosynthesis of glycogen involves two distinguishable stages. The initiation step involves the formation of a glycoprotein primer, by self-glucosylation of glycogenin to form a covalently linked oligosaccharide. The third cDNA encoded a polypeptide of unknown function and was designated GNIP (glycogenin interacting protein). To construct the vectors expressing GNIP1, the 0.4-kb fragment encoding the 5Ј end of GNIP1 was generated by BglII and NotI digestion of DNA from EST clone AI 492496 (Fig. 1).

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