Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, Vol.329, No.2, 624-631, 2005
T-cadherin GPI-anchor is insufficient for apical targeting in MDCK cells
T-cadherin is a 95 kDa glycoprotein member of the cadherin family of adhesion molecules attached to the extracellular surface of the cell membrane through a glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchor. Whether a T-cadherin ectodomain apical targeting signal or the GPI-anchor itself targets this protein to the apical membrane is not known. Chimeras of the reporter EGFP and T-cadherin have demonstrated that a minimal Construct consisting of the C-terminal 25 amino acids including the N690 (omega-site) of T-cadherin was sufficient to GPI-anchor the EGFP protein. However, efficient GPI-anchor with minimal secretion of the protein required ail additional 5 residues (omega-1 to omega-5). The GPI-anchored chimeras fractionated to the Triton X-100 detergent insoluble fraction and were released to the cell culture supernatant by phosphoinositide-specific phospho-lipase C digestion. When expressed in MDCK cells, all GPI-anchored chimeras targeted to the basolateral membrane. while the T/N-chimera and the wild-type T-cadherin targeted to the apical membrane. Therefore. T-cadherin is an example of another rare GPI-anchored protein where the anchor itself is not sufficient for apical targeting in MDCK cells. (c) 2005 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.