The rate of phaseolin assembly is controlled by the glucosylation state of its N-linked oligosaccharide chains
Academic Article
Publication Date:
1997
abstract:
Many of the proteins that are translocated into the endoplasmic reticulum are glycosylated with the addition of a 14-
saccharide core unit (Glc3Man9GlcNAc2) to specific asparagine residues of the nascent polypeptide. Glucose residues
are then removed by endoplasmic reticulum-located glucosidases, with diglucosylated and monoglucosylated intermediates
being formed. In this study, we used a cell-free system constituted of wheat germ extract and bean microsomes
to examine the role of glucose trimming in the structural maturation of phaseolin, a trimeric glycoprotein that accumulates
in the protein storage vacuoles of bean seeds. Removal of glucose residues from the N-linked chains of phaseolin
was blocked by the glucosidase inhibitors castanospermine and N-methyldeoxynojirimycin. If glucose trimming was
not allowed to occur, the assembly of phaseolin was accelerated. Conversely, polypeptides bearing partially trimmed
glycans were unable to form trimers. The effect of castanospermine on the rate of assembly was much more pronounced
for phaseolin polypeptides that have two glycans but was also evident when a single glycan chain was
present, indicating that glycan clustering can modulate the effect of glucose trimming on the rate of trimer formation.
Therefore, the position of glycan chains and their accessibility to the action of glucosidases can be fundamental elements
in the control of the structural maturation of plant glycoproteins.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
List of contributors:
Bollini, Roberto; Pedrazzini, Emanuela; Vitale, Alessandro; Ceriotti, Aldo
Published in: