Medical College of Wisconsin
CTSIResearch InformaticsREDCap

Differential O-glucose elongation on a specific EGF repeat within the canonical ligand-binding domain regulates DLL1/4-NOTCH1 signaling. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 2025 Oct 28;122(43):e2504827122

Date

10/23/2025

Pubmed ID

41129232

Pubmed Central ID

PMC12582257

DOI

10.1073/pnas.2504827122

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-105019822657 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)

Abstract

Three types of O-linked glycosylation-O-glucose, O-fucose, and O-N-acetylglucosamine- are crucial for the function of Notch receptors, which regulate critical cell fate determination processes in a wide variety of contexts. O-Glucose glycans are transferred to serine residues located between the first and second conserved cysteines within the epidermal growth factor-like (EGF) repeats in the Notch extracellular domain. Previously, O-glucose glycans were shown to be extended to a trisaccharide structure with two xyloses via α1-3 linkages. Our recent studies, however, indicated that the O-glucose glycan on NOTCH1 EGF10 can be extended by hexose and Neu5Ac. Here, we demonstrated that this hexose- and Neu5Ac-extended glycan has a 3'-sialyllactose-like structure synthesized by specific members of two isoenzyme families, B4GALT1 and ST3GAL4. Using mass spectrometry, we identified this modification exclusively on NOTCH1 EGF10 and the analogous NOTCH3 EGF9 domain, with no detection in any other EGF domains in NOTCH1, NOTCH2, and NOTCH3. Sequence comparison and mutagenesis experiments identified one amino acid at position -2 of the fourth cysteine (C4-2) in the EGF domain as crucial for the galactose elongation of O-glucose glycans. We further demonstrated that this site-specific elongation of O-glucose on NOTCH1 EGF10 significantly impacts ligand binding and signal transduction of NOTCH1. In the context of early T cell development, the C4-2 mutants NOTCH1 A396Y and A396F enhance T cell differentiation through DLL1- and DLL4-dependent NOTCH1 signaling. Our findings contribute to the understanding of the intricate regulatory mechanisms of Notch receptor function mediated by distinct positions and structures of O-glycans.

Author List

Tsukamoto Y, Aoki K, Kama Y, Hosokawa H, Saiki W, Tsukamoto N, Kato K, Hosokawa Y, Sato R, Uesugi N, Fujita Y, Fukazawa K, Funada D, Suzuki F, Kurebayashi Y, Urata Y, Uchiyama S, Wang W, Minami A, Takahashi T, Tiemeyer M, Narimatsu Y, Okajima T, Takeuchi H

Author

Kazuhiro Aoki PhD Associate Professor in the Cell Biology, Neurobiology and Anatomy department at Medical College of Wisconsin




MESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold

Animals
Calcium-Binding Proteins
Epidermal Growth Factor
Glucose
Glycosylation
Humans
Intercellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins
Ligands
Membrane Proteins
Mice
Polysaccharides
Protein Domains
Receptor, Notch1
Signal Transduction