eLife (Dec 2019)

C-mannosylation supports folding and enhances stability of thrombospondin repeats

  • Aleksandra Shcherbakova,
  • Matthias Preller,
  • Manuel H Taft,
  • Jordi Pujols,
  • Salvador Ventura,
  • Birgit Tiemann,
  • Falk FR Buettner,
  • Hans Bakker

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.52978
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

Read online

Previous studies demonstrated importance of C-mannosylation for efficient protein secretion. To study its impact on protein folding and stability, we analyzed both C-mannosylated and non-C-mannosylated thrombospondin type 1 repeats (TSRs) of netrin receptor UNC-5. In absence of C-mannosylation, UNC-5 TSRs could only be obtained at low temperature and a significant proportion displayed incorrect intermolecular disulfide bridging, which was hardly observed when C-mannosylated. Glycosylated TSRs exhibited higher resistance to thermal and reductive denaturation processes, and the presence of C-mannoses promoted the oxidative folding of a reduced and denatured TSR in vitro. Molecular dynamics simulations supported the experimental studies and showed that C-mannoses can be involved in intramolecular hydrogen bonding and limit the flexibility of the TSR tryptophan-arginine ladder. We propose that in the endoplasmic reticulum folding process, C-mannoses orient the underlying tryptophan residues and facilitate the formation of the tryptophan-arginine ladder, thereby influencing the positioning of cysteines and disulfide bridging.

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