Regulation of protein O-glycosylation by the endoplasmic reticulum–localized molecular chaperone Cosmc

T Ju, RP Aryal, CJ Stowell, RD Cummings - The Journal of cell biology, 2008 - rupress.org
T Ju, RP Aryal, CJ Stowell, RD Cummings
The Journal of cell biology, 2008rupress.org
Regulatory pathways for protein glycosylation are poorly understood, but expression of
branchpoint enzymes is critical. A key branchpoint enzyme is the T-synthase, which directs
synthesis of the common core 1 O-glycan structure (T-antigen), the precursor structure for
most mucin-type O-glycans in a wide variety of glycoproteins. Formation of active T-
synthase, which resides in the Golgi apparatus, requires a unique molecular chaperone,
Cosmc, encoded on Xq24. Cosmc is the only molecular chaperone known to be lost through …
Regulatory pathways for protein glycosylation are poorly understood, but expression of branchpoint enzymes is critical. A key branchpoint enzyme is the T-synthase, which directs synthesis of the common core 1 O-glycan structure (T-antigen), the precursor structure for most mucin-type O-glycans in a wide variety of glycoproteins. Formation of active T-synthase, which resides in the Golgi apparatus, requires a unique molecular chaperone, Cosmc, encoded on Xq24. Cosmc is the only molecular chaperone known to be lost through somatic acquired mutations in cells. We show that Cosmc is an endoplasmic reticulum (ER)–localized adenosine triphosphate binding chaperone that binds directly to human T-synthase. Cosmc prevents the aggregation and ubiquitin-mediated degradation of the T-synthase. These results demonstrate that Cosmc is a molecular chaperone in the ER required for this branchpoint glycosyltransferase function and show that expression of the disease-related Tn antigen can result from deregulation or loss of Cosmc function.
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