Publication | Closed Access
Biosynthesis and expression of the Sda and sialyl Lewis x antigens in normal and cancer colon
58
Citations
36
References
2007
Year
Slex ExpressionSlex AntigenMedicineOncogenic AgentImmunologyGlycobiologyPathologyColorectal CancerCancer BiologyCarbohydrate Determinants SdCancer ColonOncologyCell BiologyCancer ResearchTumor MicroenvironmentTumor BiologyGlycosylation
The carbohydrate determinants Sd(a) and sialyl Lewis x (sLex) both result from substitution of an alpha2,3-sialylated type 2 chain: the first with an N-acetylgalactosamine (GalNAc) beta1,4-linked to Gal and the second by an alpha1,3-linked fucose on N-acetylglucosamine. The Sd(a) antigen is synthesized by Sd(a) beta1,4-N-acetylgalactosaminyltransferase II (beta4GalNAcT-II), which is downregulated in colon cancer, whereas sLex is a cancer-associated antigen. In view of the possible competition between beta4GalNAcT-II and the fucosyltransferases (FucTs) synthesizing the sLex antigen, we investigated whether beta4GalNAcT-II acts as a negative regulator of sLex expression in colon cancer. beta4GalNAcT-II cDNA, when expressed in LS174T colon cancer cells, induces the expression of the Sd(a) antigen, a dramatic inhibition of sLex expression on cell membranes, and the replacement of sLex with the Sd(a) antigen on 290 kDa glycoproteins. Unexpectedly, in colorectal cancer specimens, beta4GalNAcT-II and sLex show a direct relation. The reasons appear to be (i) Sd(a) and sLex antigens are expressed by different glycoproteins of 340 and 290 kDa, respectively; (ii) the activity of alpha1,3-FucTs on 3'-sialyllactosamine parallels that of beta4GalNAcT-II; and (iii) both beta4GalNAcT-II and FucT activities parallel sLex expression. Quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction analysis reveals that the transcripts of beta4GalNAcT-II and those of FucT-III and FucT-VII are positively correlated. These data indicate that in colon cancer tissues, the sLex antigen is regulated mainly by the total FucT activity on 3'-sialyllactosamine acceptors and that beta4GalNAcT-II can inhibit sLex expression in an experimental model, although not in colon cancer tissues.
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