Collagen's enigmatic, highly conserved N-glycan has an essential proteostatic function

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2021 Mar 9;118(10):e2026608118. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2026608118.

Abstract

Intracellular procollagen folding begins at the protein's C-terminal propeptide (C-Pro) domain, which initiates triple-helix assembly and defines the composition and chain register of fibrillar collagen trimers. The C-Pro domain is later proteolytically cleaved and excreted from the body, while the mature triple helix is incorporated into the extracellular matrix. The procollagen C-Pro domain possesses a single N-glycosylation site that is widely conserved in all the fibrillar procollagens across humans and diverse other species. Given that the C-Pro domain is removed once procollagen folding is complete, the N-glycan might be presumed to be important for folding. Surprisingly, however, there is no difference in the folding and secretion of N-glycosylated versus non-N-glycosylated collagen type-I, leaving the function of the N-glycan unclear. We hypothesized that the collagen N-glycan might have a context-dependent function, specifically, that it could be required to promote procollagen folding only when proteostasis is challenged. We show that removal of the N-glycan from misfolding-prone C-Pro domain variants does indeed cause serious procollagen and ER proteostasis defects. The N-glycan promotes folding and secretion of destabilized C-Pro variants by providing access to the ER's lectin-based chaperone machinery. Finally, we show that the C-Pro N-glycan is actually critical for the folding and secretion of even wild-type procollagen under ER stress conditions. Such stress is commonly incurred during development, wound healing, and other processes in which collagen production plays a key role. Collectively, these results establish an essential, context-dependent function for procollagen's previously enigmatic N-glycan, wherein the carbohydrate moiety buffers procollagen folding against proteostatic challenge.

Keywords: ER protein folding; N-glycosylation; calnexin and calreticulin; collagen folding and proteostasis; extracellular matrix biosynthesis.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Collagen
  • Extracellular Matrix / genetics
  • Extracellular Matrix / metabolism*
  • Glycosylation
  • Humans
  • Procollagen / genetics
  • Procollagen / metabolism*
  • Protein Domains
  • Proteoglycans / genetics
  • Proteoglycans / metabolism*
  • Proteostasis*

Substances

  • Procollagen
  • Proteoglycans
  • glycosylated collagen
  • Collagen