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1.
Cell ; 183(3): 717-729.e16, 2020 10 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33031746

ABSTRACT

The respiratory and intestinal tracts are exposed to physical and biological hazards accompanying the intake of air and food. Likewise, the vasculature is threatened by inflammation and trauma. Mucin glycoproteins and the related von Willebrand factor guard the vulnerable cell layers in these diverse systems. Colon mucins additionally house and feed the gut microbiome. Here, we present an integrated structural analysis of the intestinal mucin MUC2. Our findings reveal the shared mechanism by which complex macromolecules responsible for blood clotting, mucociliary clearance, and the intestinal mucosal barrier form protective polymers and hydrogels. Specifically, cryo-electron microscopy and crystal structures show how disulfide-rich bridges and pH-tunable interfaces control successive assembly steps in the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi apparatus. Remarkably, a densely O-glycosylated mucin domain performs an organizational role in MUC2. The mucin assembly mechanism and its adaptation for hemostasis provide the foundation for rational manipulation of barrier function and coagulation.


Subject(s)
Biopolymers/metabolism , Mucins/metabolism , von Willebrand Factor/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Cryoelectron Microscopy , Disulfides/metabolism , Female , Glycosylation , HEK293 Cells , Humans , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Models, Molecular , Mucins/chemistry , Mucins/ultrastructure , Peptides/chemistry , Protein Domains , Protein Multimerization , von Willebrand Factor/chemistry , von Willebrand Factor/ultrastructure
2.
J Mol Biol ; 431(19): 3740-3752, 2019 09 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31310764

ABSTRACT

The mucin 2 glycoprotein assembles into a complex hydrogel that protects intestinal epithelia and houses the gut microbiome. A major step in mucin 2 assembly is further multimerization of preformed mucin dimers, thought to produce a honeycomb-like arrangement upon hydrogel expansion. Important open questions are how multiple mucin 2 dimers become covalently linked to one another and how mucin 2 multimerization compares with analogous processes in related polymers such as respiratory tract mucins and the hemostasis protein von Willebrand factor. Here we report the x-ray crystal structure of the mucin 2 multimerization module, found to form a dimer linked by two intersubunit disulfide bonds. The dimer structure calls into question the current model for intestinal mucin assembly, which proposes disulfide-mediated trimerization of the same module. Key residues making interactions across the dimer interface are highly conserved in intestinal mucin orthologs, supporting the physiological relevance of the observed quaternary structure. With knowledge of the interface residues, it can be demonstrated that many of these amino acids are also present in other mucins and in von Willebrand factor, further indicating that the stable dimer arrangement reported herein is likely to be shared across this functionally broad protein family. The mucin 2 module structure thus reveals the manner by which both mucins and von Willebrand factor polymerize, drawing deep structural parallels between macromolecular assemblies critical to mucosal epithelia and the vasculature.


Subject(s)
Dimerization , Disulfides/metabolism , Gels/chemistry , Intestines/chemistry , Mucins/metabolism , Polymerization , Amino Acid Sequence , Conserved Sequence , Crystallization , Humans , Models, Biological , Models, Molecular , Mucins/chemistry , Protein Domains , Protein Multimerization , von Willebrand Factor/metabolism
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