Abstract

In previous studies, we reported that N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase III (GnT-III) activity and the enzyme product, bisected N-glycans, both were induced in cells cultured under dense conditions in an E-cadherin-dependent manner (Iijima, J., Zhao, Y., Isaji, T., Kameyama, A., Nakaya, S., Wang, X., Ihara, H., Cheng, X., Nakagawa, T., Miyoshi, E., Kondo, A., Narimatsu, H., Taniguchi, N., and Gu, J. (2006) J. Biol. Chem. 281, 13038-13046). Furthermore, we found that α-catenin, a component of the E-cadherin-catenin complex, was also required for this induction (Akama, R., Sato, Y., Kariya, Y., Isaji, T., Fukuda, T., Lu, L., Taniguchi, N., Ozawa, M., and Gu, J. (2008) Proteomics 8, 3221-3228). To further explore the molecular mechanism of this regulation, the roles of β-catenin, an essential molecule in both cadherin-mediated cell adhesion and canonical Wnt signaling, were investigated. Unexpectedly, shRNA knockdown of β-catenin resulted in a dramatic increase in GnT-III expression and its product, the bisected N-glycans, which was confirmed by RT-PCR and GnT-III activity and by E4-PHA lectin blot analysis. The induction of GnT-III expression increased bisecting GlcNAc residues on β1 integrin, which led to down-regulation of integrin-mediated cell adhesion and cell migration. Immunostaining showed that nuclear localization of β-catenin was greatly suppressed; intriguingly, the knockdown of β-catenin in the nuclei was more effective than that in cell-cell contacts in the knockdown cells, which was also confirmed by Western blot analysis. Stimulation of the Wnt signaling pathway by the addition of exogenous Wnt3a or BIO, a GSK-3β inhibitor, consistently and significantly inhibited GnT-III expression and its products. Conversely, the inhibition of β-catenin translocation into the nuclei increased GnT-III activation. Taken together, the results of the present study are the first to clearly demonstrate that GnT-III expression may be precisely regulated by the interplay of E-cadherin-catenin complex-mediated cell-cell adhesion and Wnt/β-catenin signaling, which are both crucial in the process of epithelial-mesenchymal transitions in physiological and pathological conditions.

Highlights

  • Oligosaccharides attached to proteins are conserved in eukaryotes, and this is one of the most abundant posttranslational modification reactions [1]

  • Introduction of the bisecting GlcNAc suppresses further processing and elongation of N-glycans catalyzed by GnT-V, which is strongly associated with cancer metastasis, because GnT-V cannot utilize the bisected oligosaccharide as a substrate (6 – 8)

  • Whereas p120-catenin acts to stabilize cadherins at the cell surface [14], ␤-catenin provides a link to ␣-catenin [15], which in turn has the ability to provide a functional link to the actin cytoskeleton, promoting junction protein clustering and stabilization of cellular adhesion

Read more

Summary

The abbreviations used are

GnT-III, N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase III; GnT-V, N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase V; E4-PHA, phytohemagglutininE4; L4-PHA, phytohemagglutinin-L4. Regulation of GnT-III Expression adhesion was enhanced due to prolonged turnover of E-cadherin on the cell surface in these GnT-III transfectants [13] These results further suggest that remodeling of glycosyltransferase-modified N-glycan structures modulates cell adhesion and cancer metastasis. Whereas p120-catenin acts to stabilize cadherins at the cell surface [14], ␤-catenin provides a link to ␣-catenin [15], which in turn has the ability to provide a functional link to the actin cytoskeleton, promoting junction protein clustering and stabilization of cellular adhesion The ability of these junction core components to reorganize the actin cytoskeleton makes the assembly of cadherin-catenin adhesion complexes a highly dynamic process, which allows spatial reorganization of cells during normal development and cancer metastasis. We found that ␤-catenin has both positive and negative effects on GnT-III expression, up-regulation by E-cadherin/␤catenin-mediated cell adhesion, and down-regulation by the Wnt/␤-catenin pathway

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call