Pilar M. Crespo
National University of Cordoba
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Featured researches published by Pilar M. Crespo.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006
Andrea Uliana; Pilar M. Crespo; Jose A. Martina; Jose L. Daniotti; Hugo J. F. Maccioni
Ganglioside glycosyltransferases organize as multienzyme complexes that localize in different sub-Golgi compartments. Here we studied whether in CHO-K1 cells lacking CMP-NeuAc: GM3 sialyltransferase (SialT2), the sub-Golgi localization of UDP-Gal:glucosylceramide β-1,4-galactosyltransferase (GalT1) and CMP-NeuAc:lactosylceramide sialyltransferase (SialT1) complex is affected when SialT2, another member of this complex, is coexpressed. GalT1 and SialT1 sub-Golgi localization was determined by studying the effect of brefeldin A (BFA) and monensin on the synthesis of glycolipids and on the sub-Golgi localization of GalT11-52-CFP (cyan fluorescent protein) and SialT11-54-YFP (yellow fluorescent protein) chimeras by single cell fluorescence microscopy and by isopycnic subfractionation. We found that BFA, and also monensin, impair the synthesis of glycolipids beyond GM3 ganglioside in wild type (WT) cells but beyond GlcCer in SialT2+ cells. Although BFA redistributed GalT1-CFP and SialT1-YFP to the endoplasmic reticulum in WT cells, a fraction of these chimeras remained associated with a distal Golgi compartment, enriched in trans Golgi network, and recycling endosome markers in SialT2+ cells. In BFA-treated cells, the percentage of GalT1-CFP and SialT1-YFP associated with Golgi-like membrane fractions separated by isopycnic subfractionation was higher in SialT2+ cells than in WT cells. These effects were reverted by knocking down the expression of SialT2 with specific siRNA. Results indicate that sub-Golgi localization of glycosyltransferase complexes may change according to the relative levels of the expression of participating enzymes and reveal a capacity of the organelle to adapt the topology of the glycolipid synthesis machinery to functional states of the cell.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008
Pilar M. Crespo; David C. Silvestre; Germán A. Gil; Hugo J. F. Maccioni; Jose L. Daniotti; Beatriz L. Caputto
It has been demonstrated that c-Fos has, in addition to its well recognized AP-1 transcription factor activity, the capacity to associate to the endoplasmic reticulum and activate key enzymes involved in the synthesis of phospholipids required for membrane biogenesis during cell growth and neurite formation. Because membrane genesis requires the coordinated supply of all its integral membrane components, the question emerges as to whether c-Fos also activates the synthesis of glycolipids, another ubiquitous membrane component. We show that c-Fos activates the metabolic labeling of glycolipids in differentiating PC12 cells. Specifically, c-Fos activates the enzyme glucosylceramide synthase (GlcCerS), the product of which, GlcCer, is the first glycosylated intermediate in the pathway of synthesis of glycolipids. By contrast, the activities of GlcCer galactosyltransferase 1 and lactosylceramide sialyltransferase 1 are essentially unaffected by c-Fos. Co-immunoprecipitation experiments in cells co-transfected with c-Fos and a V5-tagged version of GlcCerS evidenced that both proteins participate in a physical association. c-Fos expression is tightly regulated by specific environmental cues. This strict regulation assures that lipid metabolism activation will occur as a response to cell requirements thus pointing to c-Fos as an important regulator of key membrane metabolisms in membrane biogenesis-demanding processes.
FEBS Journal | 2006
Ramiro Iglesias-Bartolome; Pilar M. Crespo; Guillermo A. Gomez; Jose L. Daniotti
Gangliosides are sialic acid‐containing glycosphingolipids present on mammalian plasma membranes, where they participate in cell‐surface events such as modulation of growth factor receptors and cell‐to‐cell and cell‐to‐matrix interactions. Antibodies to gangliosides have been associated with a wide range of clinically identifiable acute and chronic neuropathy syndromes. In addition, antibodies to tumor‐associated gangliosides are being used as therapeutic agents. Their binding to and release from cell membranes and intracellular destinations have not so far been extensively examined. In this study, we characterized in both GD3 ganglioside‐expressing Chinese hamster ovary (CHO)‐K1 and SK‐Mel 28 melanoma cells the intracellular trafficking and subcellular localization of the mouse monoclonal antibody to GD3, R24. By biochemical techniques and detailed confocal microscopic analysis, we demonstrate that the GD3–R24 antibody complex is rapidly and specifically internalized by a dynamin 2‐independent pathway and then accumulates in the endocytic recycling compartment. In addition, we show that the R24 antibody exits the recycling compartment en route to the plasma membrane by a dynamin 2‐dependent pathway sensitive to brefeldin A and monensin. Taken together, our results indicate that the GD3–R24 complex is endocytosed in GD3‐expressing cells, accumulates in the recycling endosome, and is transported back to the plasma membrane via a route that involves clathrin‐coated vesicles.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010
Pilar M. Crespo; Vanina Torres Demichelis; Jose L. Daniotti
Gangliosides, complex glycosphingolipids containing sialic acids, are synthesized in the endoplasmic reticulum and in the Golgi complex. These neobiosynthesized gangliosides move via vesicular transport to the plasma membrane, becoming components of the external leaflet. Gangliosides can undergo endocytosis followed by recycling to the cell surface or sorting to the Golgi complex or lysosomes for remodeling and catabolism. Recently, glycosphingolipid catabolic enzymes (glycohydrolases) have been found to be associated with the plasma membrane, where they display activity on the membrane components. In this work, we demonstrated that ecto-ganglioside glycosyltransferases may catalyze ganglioside synthesis outside the Golgi compartment, particularly at the cell surface. Specifically, we report the first direct evidence of expression and activity of CMP-NeuAc:GM3 sialyltransferase (Sial-T2) at the cell surface of epithelial and melanoma cells, with membrane-integrated ecto-Sial-T2 being able to sialylate endogenously synthesized GM3 ganglioside as well as exogenously incorporated substrate. Interestingly, we also showed that ecto-Sial-T2 was able to synthesize GD3 ganglioside at the cell surface using the endogenously synthesized cytidine monophospho-N-acetylneuraminic acid (CMP-NeuAc) available at the extracellular milieu. In addition, the expression of UDP-GalNAc:LacCer/GM3/GD3 N-acetylgalactosaminyltransferase (GalNAc-T) was also detected at the cell surface of epithelial cells, whose catalytic activity was only observed after feeding the cells with exogenous GM3 substrate. Thus, the relative interplay between the plasma membrane-associated glycosyltransferase and glycohydrolase activities, even when acting on a common substrate, emerges as a potential level of regulation of the local glycosphingolipid composition in response to different external and internal stimuli.
Biochemical Journal | 2004
Pilar M. Crespo; Adolfo R. Zurita; Claudio G. Giraudo; Hugo J. F. Maccioni; Jose L. Daniotti
GEM (glycosphingolipid-enriched microdomains) are specialized detergent-resistant domains of the plasma membrane in which some gangliosides concentrate. Although genesis of GEM is considered to occur in the Golgi complex, where the synthesis of gangliosides also occurs, the issue concerning the incorporation of ganglioside species into GEM is still poorly understood. In this work, using Chinese hamster ovary K1 cell clones with different glycolipid compositions, we compared the behaviour with cold Triton X-100 solubilization of plasma membrane ganglioside species with the same species newly synthesized in Golgi membranes. We also investigated whether three ganglioside glycosyltransferases (a sialyl-, a N-acetylgalactosaminyl- and a galactosyl-transferase) are included or excluded from GEM in Golgi membranes. Our data show that an important fraction of plasma membrane G(M3), and most G(D3) and G(T3), reside in GEM. Immunocytochemical examination of G(D3)-expressing cells showed G(D3) to be distributed as cold-detergent-resistant patches in the plasma membrane. These patches did not co-localize with a glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored protein used as GEM marker, indicating a heterogeneous composition of plasma membrane GEM. In Golgi membranes we were unable to find evidence for GEM localization of either ganglioside glycosyltransferases or newly synthesized gangliosides. Since the same ganglioside species appear in plasma membrane GEM, it was concluded that in vivo nascent G(D3), G(T3) and G(M3) segregate from their synthesizing transferases and then enter GEM. This latter event could have taken place shortly after synthesis in the Golgi cisternae, along the secretory pathway and/or at the cell surface.
Biochemical Journal | 2006
Ana Luiza Ziulkoski; Cláudia M. B. Andrade; Pilar M. Crespo; Elisa Sisti; Vera Maria Treis Trindade; Jose L. Daniotti; Fátima Theresinha Costa Rodrigues Guma; Radovan Borojevic
In previous studies, we have shown that the myelopoiesis dependent upon myelosupportive stroma required production of growth factors and heparan-sulphate proteoglycans, as well as generation of a negatively charged sialidase-sensitive intercellular environment between the stroma and the myeloid progenitors. In the present study, we have investigated the production, distribution and role of gangliosides in an experimental model of in vitro myelopoiesis dependent upon AFT-024 murine liver-derived stroma. We used the FDC-P1 cell line, which is dependent upon GM-CSF (granulocyte/macrophage colony-stimulating factor) for both survival and proliferation, as a reporter system to monitor bioavailability and local activity of GM-CSF. G(M3) was the major ganglioside produced by stroma, but not by myeloid cells, and it was required for optimal stroma myelosupportive function. It was released into the supernatant and selectively incorporated into the myeloid progenitor cells, where it segregated into rafts in which it co-localized with the GM-CSF-receptor alpha chain. This ganglioside was also metabolized further by myeloid cells into gangliosides of the a and b series, similar to endogenous G(M3). In these cells, G(M1) was the major ganglioside and it was segregated at the interface by stroma and myeloid cells, partially co-localizing with the GM-CSF-receptor alpha chain. We conclude that myelosupportive stroma cells produce and secrete the required growth factors, the cofactors such as heparan sulphate proteoglycans, and also supply gangliosides that are transferred from stroma to target cells, generating on the latter ones specific membrane domains with molecular complexes that include growth factor receptors.
FEBS Journal | 2008
Pilar M. Crespo; Natalia von Muhlinen; Ramiro Iglesias-Bartolome; Jose L. Daniotti
Gangliosides are glycosphingolipids mainly present at the outer leaflet of the plasma membrane of eukaryotic cells, where they participate in recognition and signalling activities. The synthesis of gangliosides is carried out in the lumen of the Golgi apparatus by a complex system of glycosyltransferases. After synthesis, gangliosides leave the Golgi apparatus via the lumenal surface of transport vesicles destined to the plasma membrane. In this study, we analysed the synthesis and membrane distribution of GD3 and GM1 gangliosides endogenously synthesized by Madin–Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cell lines genetically modified to express appropriate ganglioside glycosyltransferases. Using biochemical techniques and confocal laser scanning microscopy analysis, we demonstrated that GD3 and GM1, after being synthesized at the Golgi apparatus, were transported and accumulated mainly at the plasma membrane of nonpolarized MDCK cell lines. More interestingly, both complex gangliosides were found to be enriched mainly at the apical domain when these cell lines were induced to polarize. In addition, we demonstrated that, after arrival at the plasma membrane, GD3 and GM1 gangliosides were endocytosed using a clathrin‐independent pathway. Then, internalized GD3, in association with a specific monoclonal antibody, was accumulated in endosomal compartments and transported back to the plasma membrane. In contrast, endocytosed GM1, in association with cholera toxin, was transported to endosomal compartments en route to the Golgi apparatus. In conclusion, our results demonstrate that complex gangliosides are apically sorted in polarized MDCK cells, and that GD3 and GM1 gangliosides are internalized by clathrin‐independent endocytosis to follow different intracellular destinations.
FEBS Letters | 2012
Waldo Spessott; Pilar M. Crespo; Jose L. Daniotti; Hugo J. F. Maccioni
The synthesis of gangliosides GM3 and GD3 is carried out by the successive addition of sialic acid residues on lactosylceramide (LacCer) by the Golgi located sialyltransferases Sial‐T1 and Sial‐T2, respectively. CHO‐K1 cells lack Sial‐T2 and only express GM3. Here we show that the activity of Sial‐T1 was near 2.5‐fold higher in homogenates of CHO‐K1 cells transfected to express Sial‐T2 (CHO‐K1Sial‐T2) than in untransfected cells. The appearance of Sial‐T1 enzyme or gene transcription activators or the stabilization of the Sial‐T1 protein were discarded as possible causes of the activation. Sial‐T2 lacking the catalytic domain failed to promote Sial‐T1 activation. Since Gal‐T1, Sial‐T1 and Sial‐T2 form a multienzyme complex, we propose that transformation of formed GM3 into GD3 and GT3 by Sial‐T2 in the complex leaves Sial‐T1 unoccupied, enabled for new rounds of LacCer utilization, which results in its apparent activation.
Journal of Cellular Biochemistry | 2006
Jose L. Daniotti; Pilar M. Crespo; Tadashi Yamashita
We studied in this work the in vivo phosphorylation of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFr) in skin from knockout mice lacking different ganglioside glycosyltransferases. Results show an enhancement of EGFr phosphorylation, after EGF stimulation, in skin from Sial‐T2 knockout and Sial‐T2/GalNAc‐T double knockout mice as compared with wild‐type and Sial‐T1 knockout mice. Qualitative analysis of ganglioside composition in mice skin suggest that the increase of EGFr phosphorylation observed in skin from Sial‐T2 knockout and Sial‐T2/GalNAc‐T double knockout mice in response to EGF might not be primary attributed to the expression of GD3 or a‐series gangliosides in mice skin. These studies provide, for the first time, an approach for studying the molecular mechanisms involved in the in vivo regulation of EGFr function by gangliosides. J. Cell. Biochem. 99: 1442–1451, 2006.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002
Pilar M. Crespo; Adolfo R. Zurita; Jose L. Daniotti