He H T, Finne J, Goridis C
Centre d'Immunologie, Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique de Marseille-Luminy, France.
J Cell Biol. 1987 Dec;105(6 Pt 1):2489-500. doi: 10.1083/jcb.105.6.2489.
The neural cell adhesion molecule (N-CAM) of rodents comprises three distinct proteins of Mr 180,000, 140,000, and 120,000 (designated N-CAM-180, -140, and -120). They are expressed in different proportions by different tissues and cell types. but the individual contribution of each form to cell adhesion is presently unknown. Previous studies have shown that the two N-CAM species of higher relative molecular mass span the membrane whereas N-CAM-120 lacks a transmembrane domain and can be released from the cell surface by phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C. In this report, we provided evidence that N-CAM-120 contained covalently bound phosphatidylinositol and studied N-CAM-120 from its biosynthesis to its membrane insertion and finally to its release from the cell surface. Evidence was presented showing that the lipid tail of N-CAM-120 contained ethanolamine as is the case for other lipid-linked molecules. The phospholipid anchor was attached to the protein during the first minutes after completion of the polypeptide chain. This process took place in the endoplasmic reticulum as judged from endoglycosidase H digestion experiments. Immediately after a 2-min pulse with [35S]methionine, we detected also a short-lived precursor that had not yet acquired the lipid tail. Pulse-chase studies established that N-CAM-120 was transported to the cell surface from which it was slowly released into the extracellular milieu. The molecules recovered in the incubation medium appeared to have lost all of their bound fatty acid but only around half of the ethanolamine. Upon fractionation of brain tissue, approximately 75% of N-CAM-120 was recovered with a membrane fraction and approximately 25% in a membrane-free supernatant. A small proportion (approximately 6%) was found to be resistant to extraction by non-ionic detergent. A major posttranslational modification of N-CAM is polysialylation. Our results showed that also N-CAM-120 was polysialylated in the young postnatal brain and released in this form from cultured cerebellar cells. The presence of N-CAM in a form that can be released from the cell surface and accumulates in the extracellular fluid suggests a novel mechanism by which N-CAM-mediated adhesion may be modulated.
啮齿动物的神经细胞黏附分子(N-CAM)由三种不同的蛋白质组成,分子量分别为180,000、140,000和120,000(分别称为N-CAM-180、-140和-120)。它们在不同组织和细胞类型中的表达比例不同。但目前尚不清楚每种形式对细胞黏附的具体作用。先前的研究表明,相对分子质量较高的两种N-CAM跨膜,而N-CAM-120缺乏跨膜结构域,可被磷脂酰肌醇特异性磷脂酶C从细胞表面释放。在本报告中,我们提供证据表明N-CAM-120含有共价结合的磷脂酰肌醇,并研究了N-CAM-120从生物合成到膜插入,最终到从细胞表面释放的过程。有证据表明,N-CAM-120的脂尾含有乙醇胺,其他脂连接分子也是如此。磷脂酰肌醇锚在多肽链合成完成后的最初几分钟内与蛋白质相连。从内切糖苷酶H消化实验判断,这一过程发生在内质网中。在用[35S]甲硫氨酸进行2分钟脉冲标记后,我们还检测到了一种尚未获得脂尾的短命前体。脉冲追踪研究表明,N-CAM-120被转运到细胞表面,并从那里缓慢释放到细胞外环境中。在培养液中回收的分子似乎失去了所有结合的脂肪酸,但只失去了大约一半的乙醇胺。对脑组织进行分级分离后,约75%的N-CAM-120与膜组分一起回收,约25%存在于无膜上清液中。发现一小部分(约6%)对非离子去污剂提取具有抗性。N-CAM的一个主要翻译后修饰是多唾液酸化。我们的结果表明,在出生后早期的大脑中,N-CAM-120也会发生多唾液酸化,并从培养的小脑细胞中释放出来。以可从细胞表面释放并在细胞外液中积累的形式存在的N-CAM提示了一种新的机制,通过该机制N-CAM介导的黏附可能受到调节。