Shi W X, Chammas R, Varki A
University of California at San Diego Cancer Center, Division of Cellular and Molecular Medicine, University of California at San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093, USA.
J Biol Chem. 1996 Jun 21;271(25):15130-8. doi: 10.1074/jbc.271.25.15130.
9-O-Acetylation of sialic acids shows cell type-specific and developmentally regulated expression in various systems. In a given cell type, O-acetylation can also be specific to a particular type of glycoconjugate. It is assumed that this regulation is achieved by control of expression of specific 9-O-acetyltransferases. However, it has been difficult to test this hypothesis, as these enzymes have so far proven intractable to purification or molecular cloning. During a cloning attempt, we discovered that while polyoma T antigen-positive Chinese hamster ovary cells (CHO-Tag cells) do not normally express cell-surface 9-O-acetylation, they do so when transiently transfected with a cDNA encoding the lactosamine-specific alpha2-6-sialyltransferase (Galbeta1-4GlcNAc:alpha2-6-sialyltransferase (ST6Gal I); formerly ST6N). This phenomenon is reproducible by stable expression of ST6Gal I in parental CHO cells, but not upon transfection of the competing lactosamine-specific alpha2-3-sialyltransferase (Galbeta1-(3)4GlcNAc:alpha2-3-sialyltransferase; (ST6Gal III) formerly ST3N) into either cell type. Further analyses of stably transfected parental CHO-K1 cells indicated that expression of the ST6Gal I gene causes selective 9-O-acetylation of alpha2-6-linked sialic acid residues on N-linked oligosaccharides. In a similar manner, while the alpha2-3-linked sialic acid residue of the endogenous GM3 ganglioside of CHO cells is not O-acetylated, transfection of an alpha2-8-sialyltransferase (GM3:alpha2-8-sialyltransferase (ST8Sia I); formerly GD3 synthase) caused expression of 9-O-acetylation of the alpha2-8-linked sialic acid residues of newly synthesized GD3. These data indicate either that linkage-specific sialic acid O-acetyltransferase(s) are constitutively expressed in CHO cells or that expression of these enzymes is secondarily induced upon expression of certain sialyltransferases. The former explanation is supported by a low level of background 9-O-acetylation found in parental CHO-K1 cells and by the finding that O-acetylation is not induced when the ST6Gal I or ST8Sia I cDNAs are overexpressed in SV40 T antigen-expressing primate (COS) cells. Taken together, these results indicate that expression of sialic acid 9-O-acetylation can be regulated by the action of specific sialyltransferases that alter the predominant linkage of the terminal sialic acids found on specific classes of glycoconjugates.
唾液酸的9 - O - 乙酰化在各种系统中表现出细胞类型特异性和发育调控性表达。在给定的细胞类型中,O - 乙酰化也可能特定于某一特定类型的糖缀合物。据推测,这种调控是通过控制特定9 - O - 乙酰转移酶的表达来实现的。然而,很难验证这一假设,因为到目前为止,这些酶难以纯化或进行分子克隆。在一次克隆尝试中,我们发现多瘤T抗原阳性的中国仓鼠卵巢细胞(CHO - Tag细胞)通常不表达细胞表面的9 - O - 乙酰化,但当用编码乳糖胺特异性α2 - 6 - 唾液酸转移酶(Galβ1 - 4GlcNAc:α2 - 6 - 唾液酸转移酶(ST6Gal I);原ST6N)的cDNA进行瞬时转染时,它们会表达9 - O - 乙酰化。这种现象在亲代CHO细胞中通过稳定表达ST6Gal I可重现,但将竞争性的乳糖胺特异性α2 - 3 - 唾液酸转移酶(Galβ1-(3)4GlcNAc:α2 - 3 - 唾液酸转移酶;(ST6Gal III)原ST3N)转染到任何一种细胞类型中均不会诱导该现象。对稳定转染的亲代CHO - K1细胞的进一步分析表明,ST6Gal I基因的表达导致N - 连接寡糖上α2 - 6连接的唾液酸残基发生选择性9 - O - 乙酰化。同样,虽然CHO细胞内源性GM3神经节苷脂的α2 - 3连接的唾液酸残基不发生O - 乙酰化,但转染α2 - 8 - 唾液酸转移酶(GM3:α2 - 8 - 唾液酸转移酶(ST8Sia I);原GD3合酶)会导致新合成的GD3的α2 - 8连接的唾液酸残基发生9 - O - 乙酰化表达。这些数据表明,要么连接特异性唾液酸O - 乙酰转移酶在CHO细胞中组成性表达,要么这些酶的表达在某些唾液酸转移酶表达后被继发性诱导。亲代CHO - K1细胞中发现的低水平背景9 - O - 乙酰化以及在表达SV40 T抗原的灵长类(COS)细胞中过表达ST6Gal I或ST8Sia I cDNA时未诱导O - 乙酰化这一发现支持了前一种解释。综上所述,这些结果表明,唾液酸9 - O - 乙酰化的表达可通过特定唾液酸转移酶的作用来调控,这些唾液酸转移酶会改变特定类糖缀合物上末端唾液酸的主要连接方式。