A major gap in the ?bench to bedside? paradigm is the ability to harness the glycome for the development of novel therapeutics. Although decades of research in glycobiology have established glycomic changes associated with disease, almost nothing is known about how those changes arise, the functions they play in disease initiation or progression, or how the glycome is actually regulated. Based on provocative new data, we propose a transformative new model for glycomic compositional regulation of soluble secreted glycoproteins that provides a clear path for the development of the first generation of glycan-modulating therapies for a wide range of diseases. The model is based on the notion that the glycans of glycoproteins can be remodeled after release from the originating cell, and if correct, our findings will refute the glycobiology dogma in which glycomic changes are dependent upon the slow process of protein turnover and de novo synthesis to one that is highly dynamic, rapid, and specific to the immunologic environment. The proposal centers on the molecular action, regulation and necessary microenvironment for ST6Gal1 to add ?2,6-linked sialic acids onto glycans with available terminal galactose residues. Our proposal also focuses upon the B cell-secreted glycoprotein/antibody IgG. This is a critical pathway to understand because ST6Gal1 is the sole enzyme that determines whether anti-inflammatory ?2,6-sialyl-IgG or pro-inflammatory asialyl-IgG is produced at any given time, thereby making it a key immunomodulatory factor.
In Aim 1, we will dissect the enzymatic action of ST6Gal1 from hematopoietic cells other than B cells during IgG production.
In Aim 2, we will extend our studies to the microenvironment necessary to support ST6Gal1 activity in modifying IgG sialylation. Even if our model for glycoprotein glycan remodeling is limited to sialylation, such a pathway could influence immune pathways such as leukocyte trafficking, the distinction between self and non-self by siglecs, synthesis of the ABO blood groups, transplantation, IgG functionality and many others. Our findings could redefine the nature of the glycome as one under dynamic regulation that could be therapeutically harnessed via the creation of an entirely new class of glycosylation- altering drugs for the treatment of diseases ranging from inflammatory disorders and autoimmunity to cancer.

Public Health Relevance

Years of research have shown that disease frequently accompanies changes in the glycome. We hypothesize that this stems from a previously unrecognized pathway of dynamic and targeted regulation of protein glycosylation which serves to modulate form and function to meet the immediate biological need. Our proposal is centered on a key enzyme responsible for the addition of sialic acids on glycoproteins, whose action appears to fall well outside of the canonical secretory pathway to modulate sialylation of B cell-secreted IgG antibodies. The action of this enzyme, the cellular microenvironment necessary to support its function, and its role in inflammatory disease will be investigated as an exemplar of a novel glycosylation pathway for glycoproteins outside of the originating cell. We believe that this will pave the way towards the manipulation of the glycome to influence disease progression and susceptibility.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
2R01GM115234-05
Application #
10152265
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1)
Program Officer
Bond, Michelle Rueffer
Project Start
2016-09-01
Project End
2024-11-30
Budget Start
2021-01-01
Budget End
2021-11-30
Support Year
5
Fiscal Year
2021
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Case Western Reserve University
Department
Pathology
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
077758407
City
Cleveland
State
OH
Country
United States
Zip Code
44106
Zhou, Julie Y; Oswald, Douglas M; Oliva, Kelsey D et al. (2018) The Glycoscience of Immunity. Trends Immunol 39:523-535
Oliva, Kelsey D; Cavanaugh, Jill M; Cobb, Brian A (2018) Antibody receptors steal the sweet spotlight. J Biol Chem 293:3490-3491
Jones, Mark B; Ryan, Sean O; Johnson, Jenny L et al. (2016) Dendritic cell-specific Mgat2 knockout mice show antigen presentation defects but reveal an unexpected CD11c expression pattern. Glycobiology 26:1007-1013