Death-receptor O-glycosylation controls tumor-cell sensitivity to the proapoptotic ligand Apo2L/TRAIL

KW Wagner, EA Punnoose, T Januario, DA Lawrence… - Nature medicine, 2007 - nature.com
KW Wagner, EA Punnoose, T Januario, DA Lawrence, RM Pitti, K Lancaster, D Lee…
Nature medicine, 2007nature.com
Apo2L/TRAIL stimulates cancer cell death through the proapoptotic receptors DR4 and DR5,
but the determinants of tumor susceptibility to this ligand are not fully defined. mRNA
expression of the peptidyl O-glycosyltransferase GALNT14 correlated with Apo2L/TRAIL
sensitivity in pancreatic carcinoma, non–small-cell lung carcinoma and melanoma cell lines,
and up to 30% of samples from various human malignancies showed GALNT14
overexpression. RNA interference of GALNT14 reduced cellular Apo2L/TRAIL sensitivity …
Abstract
Apo2L/TRAIL stimulates cancer cell death through the proapoptotic receptors DR4 and DR5, but the determinants of tumor susceptibility to this ligand are not fully defined. mRNA expression of the peptidyl O-glycosyltransferase GALNT14 correlated with Apo2L/TRAIL sensitivity in pancreatic carcinoma, non–small-cell lung carcinoma and melanoma cell lines, and up to 30% of samples from various human malignancies showed GALNT14 overexpression. RNA interference of GALNT14 reduced cellular Apo2L/TRAIL sensitivity, whereas overexpression increased responsiveness. Biochemical analysis of DR5 identified several ectodomain O-(N-acetyl galactosamine–galactose–sialic acid) structures. Sequence comparison predicted conserved extracellular DR4 and DR5 O-glycosylation sites; progressive mutation of the DR5 sites attenuated apoptotic signaling. O-glycosylation promoted ligand-stimulated clustering of DR4 and DR5, which mediated recruitment and activation of the apoptosis-initiating protease caspase-8. These results uncover a new link between death-receptor O-glycosylation and apoptotic signaling, providing potential predictive biomarkers for Apo2L/TRAIL-based cancer therapy.
nature.com