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Publication : Transgenic analysis of rds/peripherin N-glycosylation: effect on dimerization, interaction with rom1, and rescue of the rds null phenotype.

First Author  Kedzierski W Year  1999
Journal  J Neurochem Volume  72
Issue  1 Pages  430-8
PubMed ID  9886097 Mgi Jnum  J:52173
Mgi Id  MGI:1328527 Doi  10.1046/j.1471-4159.1999.0720430.x
Citation  Kedzierski W, et al. (1999) Transgenic analysis of rds/peripherin N-glycosylation: effect on dimerization, interaction with rom1, and rescue of the rds null phenotype. J Neurochem 72(1):430-8
abstractText  Rds/peripherin is an integral membrane glycoprotein that is present in the rims of photoreceptor outer segment disks. In mammals, it is thought to stabilize the disk rim through heterophilic interactions with the related nonglycosylated protein roml. Glycosylation of rds/peripherin at asparagine 229 is widely conserved in vertebrates. In this study, we investigated the role of rds/peripherin N-glycosylation. We generated transgenic mice that expressed only S231A-substituted rds/peripherin in their retinas. This protein was not glycosylated but formed covalent dimers with itself and with glycosylated rds/peripherin. Nonglycosylated rds/peripherin also interacted noncovalently with rom1 homodimers to form a heterooligomeric complex. The glycosylated rds/peripherin..rom1 complex bound to concanavalin A-Sepharose, suggesting that the glycan is not directly involved in the interaction between these proteins. In double transgenic mice expressing normal and S231A-substituted rds/peripherin, the mRNA-to-protein ratios were similar for both transgenes, indicating no effect of N-glycosylation on rds/peripherin stability. Finally, expression of nonglycosylated rds/peripherin in transgenic mice rescued the phenotype of outer segment nondevelopment in retinal degeneration slow (rds-/-) null mutants. These observations indicate that N-glycosylation of rds/peripherin is not required for its normal processing, stability, or in vivo function.
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