Abstract

Leukocyte adhesion during inflammation is initiated by the binding of sialofucosylated carbohydrates expressed on leukocytes to endothelial E/P-selectin. Although the glycosyltransferases (glycoTs) constructing selectin-ligands have largely been identified using knock-out mice, important differences may exist between humans and mice. To address this, we developed a systematic lentivirus-based shRNA delivery workflow to create human leukocytic HL-60 cell lines that lack up to three glycoTs. Using this, the contributions of all three myeloid α1,3-fucosyltransferases (FUT4, FUT7, and FUT9) to selectin-ligand biosynthesis were evaluated. The cell adhesion properties of these modified cells to L-, E-, and P-selectin under hydrodynamic shear were compared with bone marrow-derived neutrophils from Fut4(-/-)Fut7(-/-) dual knock-out mice. Results demonstrate that predominantly FUT7, and to a lesser extent FUT4, forms the selectin-ligand at the N terminus of leukocyte P-selectin glycoprotein ligand-1 (PSGL-1) in humans and mice. Here, 85% reduction in leukocyte interaction was observed in human FUT4(-)7(-) dual knockdowns on P/L-selectin substrates. Unlike Fut4(-/-)Fut7(-/-) mouse neutrophils, however, human knockdowns lacking FUT4 and FUT7 only exhibited partial reduction in rolling interaction on E-selectin. In this case, the third α1,3-fucosyltransferase FUT9 played an important role because leukocyte adhesion was reduced by 50-60% in FUT9-HL-60, 70-80% in dual knockdown FUT7(-)9(-) cells, and ∼85% in FUT4(-)7(-)9(-) triple knockdowns. Gene silencing results are in agreement with gain-of-function experiments where all three fucosyltransferases conferred E-selectin-mediated rolling in HEK293T cells. This study advances new tools to study human glycoT function. It suggests a species-specific role for FUT9 during the biosynthesis of human E-selectin ligands.

Highlights

  • During inflammation, the selectins engage glycosylated macromolecules expressed on blood leukocytes under fluid shear conditions

  • This study examines the role of human leukocyte glycoTs in regulating cell-surface glycan expression and selectin-mediated cell adhesion

  • FUT4 levels are high in HL-60, whereas FUT9 is expressed at high levels in mature neutrophils

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Summary

Background

The selectins engage glycosylated macromolecules expressed on blood leukocytes under fluid shear conditions. Unlike Fut4؊/؊Fut7؊/؊ mouse neutrophils, human knockdowns lacking FUT4 and FUT7 only exhibited partial reduction in rolling interaction on E-selectin In this case, the third ␣1,3-fucosyltransferase FUT9 played an important role because leukocyte adhesion was reduced by 50 – 60% in FUT9HL-60, 70 – 80% in dual knockdown FUT7؊9؊ cells, and ϳ85% in FUT4؊7؊9؊ triple knockdowns. Whether the selectin-ligands differ in murine versus human systems because of species-specific functions of glycoTs remains undetermined We addressed this possibility by advancing RNA interference (RNAi) and lentiviral delivery tools to study glycoTs in human leukocytes. The study introduces RNA interference methods for studies of leukocyte glycoTs. Unlike previous studies with Fut4Ϫ/ϪFut7Ϫ/Ϫ dual knock-out mice that exhibit complete loss of E-, P-, and L-selectin binding function in a variety of physiological and pathological models [17, 18], our data demonstrate a novel role for FUT9 in catalyzing human E-selectin ligand synthesis. This is the first demonstration of glycoTs in different mammalian species having distinct contributions to leukocyte rolling

Cell Culture
Molecular Biology
Viral Transduction
FUT Enzyme Activity
Quantifying glycoT shRNA Silencing Efficiency
Flow Cytometry
Neutrophil Isolation from Mouse Bone Marrow
Microfluidic Cell Adhesion Assay
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
LeX sLeX
WT HEK
Full Text
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