Abstract

Cardiac calsequestrin concentrates in junctional sarcoplasmic reticulum in heart and skeletal muscle cells by an undefined mechanism. During transit through the secretory pathway, it undergoes an as yet uncharacterized glycosylation and acquires phosphate on CK2-sensitive sites. In this study, we have shown that active calsequestrin phosphorylation occurred in nonmuscle cells as well as muscle cells, reflecting a widespread cellular process. To characterize this post-translational modification and resolve individual molecular mass species, we subjected purified calsequestrin to mass spectrometry using electrospray ionization. Mass spectra showed that calsequestrin glycan structure in nonmuscle cells was that expected for an endoplasmic reticulum-localized glycoprotein and showed that each glycoform existed as four mass peaks representing molecules that also had 0-3 phosphorylation sites occupied. In heart, mass peaks indicated carbohydrate modifications characteristic of transit through Golgi compartments. Phosphorylation did not occur on every glycoform present, suggesting a far more complex movement of calsequestrin molecules in heart cells. Significant amounts of calsequestrin contained glycan with only a single mannose residue, indicative of a novel post-endoplasmic reticulum mannosidase activity. In conclusion, glyco- and phosphoforms of calsequestrin chart a complex cellular transport in heart, with calsequestrin following trafficking pathways not present or not accessible to the same molecules in nonmuscle.

Highlights

  • Cardiac calsequestrin (CSQ)1 is concentrated in junctional sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) terminal cisternae as part of the multimeric Ca2ϩ-release channel complex [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8] that includes the cardiac ryanodine receptor [9, 10], junctin [11], and cardiac triadin-1 [12]

  • Mass spectra showed that calsequestrin glycan structure in nonmuscle cells was that expected for an endoplasmic reticulum-localized glycoprotein and showed that each glycoform existed as four mass peaks representing molecules that had 0 –3 phosphorylation sites occupied

  • We report definitive structural findings for CSQ revealed by mass spectrometry, reflecting its cellular transport in heart and muscle cells

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Summary

Introduction

Cardiac calsequestrin (CSQ)1 is concentrated in junctional sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) terminal cisternae as part of the multimeric Ca2ϩ-release channel complex [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8] that includes the cardiac ryanodine receptor [9, 10], junctin [11], and cardiac triadin-1 [12]. Mass spectra showed that calsequestrin glycan structure in nonmuscle cells was that expected for an endoplasmic reticulum-localized glycoprotein and showed that each glycoform existed as four mass peaks representing molecules that had 0 –3 phosphorylation sites occupied.

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