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Giantin mediates Golgi localization of Gal3-O-sulfotransferases and affects salivary mucin sulfation in patients with Sjögren’s disease
Matilde Nuñez, … , María-Julieta González, Isabel Castro
Matilde Nuñez, … , María-Julieta González, Isabel Castro
Published October 10, 2024
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2024;9(22):e171585. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.171585.
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Research Article Cell biology

Giantin mediates Golgi localization of Gal3-O-sulfotransferases and affects salivary mucin sulfation in patients with Sjögren’s disease

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Abstract

Sjögren’s disease is a chronic autoimmune disease characterized by symptoms of oral and ocular dryness and extraglandular manifestations. Mouth dryness is not only due to reduced saliva volume, but also to alterations in the quality of salivary mucins in patients with Sjögren’s disease. Mucins play a leading role in mucosa hydration and protection, where sulfated and sialylated oligosaccharides retain water molecules at the epithelial surface. The correct localization of glycosyltransferases and sulfotransferases within the Golgi apparatus determines adequate O-glycosylation and sulfation of mucins, which depends on specific golgins that tether enzyme-bearing vesicles. Here, we show that a golgin called Giantin was mislocalized in salivary glands from patients with Sjögren’s disease and formed protein complexes with Gal3-O-sulfotransferases (Gal3STs), which changed their localization in Giantin-knockout and -knockdown cells. Our results suggest that Giantin could tether Gal3ST-bearing vesicles and that its altered localization could affect Gal3ST activity, explaining the decreased sulfation of MUC5B observed in salivary glands from patients with Sjögren’s disease.

Authors

Matilde Nuñez, Patricia Carvajal, Sergio Aguilera, María-José Barrera, Soledad Matus, Alicia Couto, Malena Landoni, Gaelle Boncompain, Sergio González, Claudio Molina, Karina Pino, Sebastián Indo, Lourdes Figueroa, María-Julieta González, Isabel Castro

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Figure 9

Decreased MUC5B sulfated O-glycans in LSGs from patients with SjD.

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Decreased MUC5B sulfated O-glycans in LSGs from patients with SjD.
(A–F)...
(A–F) Representative images of immunohistochemical detection of partially glycosylated MUC5B (PANH2) (A and D), the MUC5B polypeptide backbone independent of its glycosylation status (EU-MUC5Bb) (B and E), and sulfo-Lewis a and c residues (F2) (C and F) in serial sections of LSGs from individuals acting as controls (A–C) and patients with SjD (D–F). Scale bars: 50 μm. (G) Spearman’s correlation between Gal3STs activity and the percentage of sulfo-Lewis a and c (F2)-positive acini. *P < 0.05 was considered significant. (H) Oligosaccharide mixtures of MUC5B obtained by reductive β-elimination analyzed by HPAEC-PAD in LSGs from individuals acting as controls (black line) and patients with SjD (blue line). The asterisk in H shows a peak detected in control samples but not in SjD samples. nC, chromatographic fingerprint of the signal.

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