Limited Addition of the 6-Arm 1,2-Linked N-Acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) Residue Facilitates the Formation of the Largest N-Glycan in Plants
Date
2017-11-27Author
JAE Yong Yoo
KI Seong Ko
HYUN-Kyeong Seo
SEONGHA Park
FANATA, Wahyu Indra Dwi
HARMOKO, Rikno
RAMASAMY, Nirmal Kumar
THULASINATAN, Thiyagarajan
MENGISTE, Tesfaye
JAE-Min Lim
SANG Yeol Lee
KYUN Oh Lee
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Show full item recordAbstract
The most abundant N-glycan in plants is the paucimannosidic
N-glycan with core
1,2-xylose and 1,3-fucose residues
(Man
3
XylFuc(GlcNAc)
). Here, we report a mechanism in
Arabidopsis thaliana that efficiently produces the largest N-glycan
in plants. Genetic and biochemical evidence indicates that
the addition of the 6-arm
1,2-GlcNAc residue by N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase
II (GnTII) is less effective than additions
of the core
1,2-xylose and 1,3-fucose residues by XylT,
FucTA, and FucTB in Arabidopsis. Furthermore, analysis of
gnt2 mutant and 35S:GnTII transgenic plants shows that the
addition of the 6-arm non-reducing GlcNAc residue to the common
N-glycan acceptor GlcNAcMan
2
3
(GlcNAc)
inhibits additions
of the core
1,2-xylose and 1,3-fucose residues. Our findings
indicate that plants limit the rate of the addition of the
6-arm GlcNAc residue to the common N-glycan acceptor
as a mechanism to facilitate formation of the prevalent N-glycans
with Man
3
XylFuc(GlcNAc)
2
and (GlcNAc)
2
2
Man
XylFuc(GlcNAc)
2
structures.
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