Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2131674 Experimental Cell Research 2009 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

The Na+-dependent transporters, hSVCT1 and hSVCT2, were assessed in COS-1 cells for their membrane topology. Antibodies to N- and C-termini of hSVCT1 and C-terminus of hSVCT2 identified positive immunofluorescence only after permeabilisation, suggesting these regions are intracellular. PNGase F treatment confirmed that WT hSVCT1 (∼ 70–100 kDa) is glycosylated and site-directed mutagenesis of the three putative N-glycosylation sites, Asn138, Asn144, Asn230, demonstrated that mutants N138Q and N144Q were glycosylated (∼ 68–90 kDa) with only 31–65% of WT l-ascorbic acid (AA) uptake while the glycosylation profile of N230Q remained unaltered (∼ 98% of WT activity). However, the N138Q/N144Q double mutant displayed barely detectable membrane expression at ∼ 65 kDa, no apparent glycosylation and minimal AA uptake (< 10%) with no discernible improvement in expression or activity when cultured at 28 °C or 37 °C. Marker protein immunocytochemistry with N138Q/N144Q identified intracellular aggregates with hSVCT1 localised at the nuclear membrane but absent at the plasma membrane thus implicating its role as a possible intracellular transporter and suggesting N-glycosylation is required for hSVCT1 membrane targeting. Also, Lys242 on the same putative hydrophilic loop as Asn230 after biotinylation was inaccessible from the extracellular side when analysed by MALDI-TOF MS. A new hSVCT1 secondary structure model supporting these findings is proposed.

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