Importance of N-glycosylation positioning for cell-surface expression, targeting, affinity and quality control of the human AT1 receptor

PM Lanctot, PC Leclerc, M Clément… - Biochemical …, 2005 - portlandpress.com
PM Lanctot, PC Leclerc, M Clément, M Auger-Messier, E Escher, R Leduc, G Guillemette
Biochemical Journal, 2005portlandpress.com
GPCRs (G-protein-coupled receptors) are preferentially N-glycosylated on ECL2
(extracellular loop 2). We previously showed that N-glycosylation of ECL2 was crucial for
cell-surface expression of the hAT1 receptor (human angiotensin II receptor subtype 1).
Here, we ask whether positioning of the N-glycosylation sites within the various ECLs of the
receptor is a vital determinant in the functional expression of hAT1 receptor at the cell
surface. Artificial N-glycosylation sequons (Asn-Xaa-Ser/Thr) were engineered into ECL1 …
GPCRs (G-protein-coupled receptors) are preferentially N-glycosylated on ECL2 (extracellular loop 2). We previously showed that N-glycosylation of ECL2 was crucial for cell-surface expression of the hAT1 receptor (human angiotensin II receptor subtype 1). Here, we ask whether positioning of the N-glycosylation sites within the various ECLs of the receptor is a vital determinant in the functional expression of hAT1 receptor at the cell surface. Artificial N-glycosylation sequons (Asn-Xaa-Ser/Thr) were engineered into ECL1, ECL2 and ECL3. N-glycosylation of ECL1 caused a very significant decrease in affinity and cell surface expression of the resulting receptor. Shifting the position of the ECL2 glycosylation site by two residues led to the synthesis of a misfolded receptor which, nevertheless, was trafficked to the cell surface. The misfolded nature of this receptor is supported by an increased interaction with the chaperone HSP70 (heat-shock protein 70). Introduction of N-glycosylation motifs into ECL3 yielded mutant receptors with normal affinity, but low levels of cell surface expression caused by proteasomal degradation. This behaviour differed from that observed for the aglycosylated receptor, which accumulated in the endoplasmic reticulum. These results show how positioning of the N-glycosylation sites altered many properties of the AT1 receptor, such as targeting, folding, affinity, cell surface expression and quality control.
portlandpress.com