Abstract
SummaryIt is commonly assumed that the glycan makeup of glycoproteins that reach the cell surface is final and static. Here, we challenge this notion by the discovery of a molecular switch that induces acute and reversible changes of glycans on the plasma membrane. We demonstrate that within minutes, the epidermal growth factor triggers the galectin-driven endocytosis of cell surface glycoproteins, such as integrins, that are key regulators of cell adhesion and migration. The onset of this process, mediated by the Na+/H+antiporter NHE-1 and the neuraminidases Neu1/3, requires the pH-triggered enzymatic removal of sialic acids whose presence otherwise prevents galectin binding. Desialylated glycoproteins are then retrogradely transported to the Golgi apparatus where their glycan makeup is reset, and their function is repurposed to regulate EGF-dependent invasive cell migration. Glycosylation at the cell surface thereby emerges as a dynamic and reversible regulatory post-translational modification that controls a highly adaptable trafficking pathway.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory