Systematic Investigation of the Trafficking of Glycoproteins on the Cell Surface

Glycoproteins located on the cell surface play a pivotal role in nearly every extracellular activity. N-glycosylation is one of the most common and important protein modifications in eukaryotic cells, and it often regulates protein folding and trafficking. Glycosylation of cell-surface proteins unde...

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Veröffentlicht in:Molecular & cellular proteomics 2024-05, Vol.23 (5), p.100761, Article 100761
Hauptverfasser: Xu, Xing, Yin, Kejun, Wu, Ronghu
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Glycoproteins located on the cell surface play a pivotal role in nearly every extracellular activity. N-glycosylation is one of the most common and important protein modifications in eukaryotic cells, and it often regulates protein folding and trafficking. Glycosylation of cell-surface proteins undergoes meticulous regulation by various enzymes in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and the Golgi, ensuring their proper folding and trafficking to the cell surface. However, the impacts of protein N-glycosylation, N-glycan maturity, and protein folding status on the trafficking of cell-surface glycoproteins remain to be explored. In this work, we comprehensively and site-specifically studied the trafficking of cell-surface glycoproteins in human cells. Integrating metabolic labeling, bioorthogonal chemistry, and multiplexed proteomics, we investigated 706 N-glycosylation sites on 396 cell-surface glycoproteins in monocytes, either by inhibiting protein N-glycosylation, disturbing N-glycan maturation, or perturbing protein folding in the ER. The current results reveal their distinct impacts on the trafficking of surface glycoproteins. The inhibition of protein N-glycosylation dramatically suppresses the trafficking of many cell-surface glycoproteins. The N-glycan immaturity has more substantial effects on proteins with high N-glycosylation site densities, while the perturbation of protein folding in the ER exerts a more pronounced impact on surface glycoproteins with larger sizes. Furthermore, for N-glycosylated proteins, their trafficking to the cell surface is related to the secondary structures and adjacent amino acid residues of glycosylation sites. Systematic analysis of surface glycoprotein trafficking advances our understanding of the mechanisms underlying protein secretion and surface presentation. [Display omitted] •Investigating the trafficking of surface glycoproteins using MS-based proteomics.•Quantifying the effects by protein folding, N-glycosylation, and N-glycan maturity.•Revealing distinct impacts on surface glycoproteins by these important factors.•Demonstrating site-specific effects on the surface glycoprotein trafficking. Xu et al. systematically investigate the trafficking of surface glycoproteins in human cells through the integration of metabolic labeling, bioorthogonal chemistry, and multiplexed proteomics. With the inhibition of protein N-glycosylation, N-glycan maturity, and protein folding in the ER, respectively, the results reveal their
ISSN:1535-9476
1535-9484
1535-9484
DOI:10.1016/j.mcpro.2024.100761