Genomics and Proteomics
α-1,6-Fucosyltransferase (FUT8) Inhibits Hemoglobin Production during Differentiation of Murine and K562 Human Erythroleukemia Cells*

https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M113.459594Get rights and content
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Erythropoiesis results from a complex combination of the expression of several transcription factor genes and cytokine signaling. However, the overall view of erythroid differentiation remains unclear. First, we screened for erythroid differentiation-related genes by comparing the expression profiles of high differentiation-inducible and low differentiation-inducible murine erythroleukemia cells. We identified that overexpression of α-1,6-fucosyltransferase (Fut8) inhibits hemoglobin production. FUT8 catalyzes the transfer of a fucose residue to N-linked oligosaccharides on glycoproteins via an α-1,6 linkage, leading to core fucosylation in mammals. Expression of Fut8 was down-regulated during chemically induced differentiation of murine erythroleukemia cells. Additionally, expression of Fut8 was positively regulated by c-Myc and c-Myb, which are known as suppressors of erythroid differentiation. Second, we found that FUT8 is the only fucosyltransferase family member that inhibits hemoglobin production. Functional analysis of FUT8 revealed that the donor substrate-binding domain and a flexible loop play essential roles in inhibition of hemoglobin production. This result clearly demonstrates that core fucosylation inhibits hemoglobin production. Third, FUT8 also inhibited hemoglobin production of human erythroleukemia K562 cells. Finally, a short hairpin RNA study showed that FUT8 down-regulation induced hemoglobin production and increase of transferrin receptor/glycophorin A-positive cells in human erythroleukemia K562 cells. Our findings define FUT8 as a novel factor for hemoglobin production and demonstrate that core fucosylation plays an important role in erythroid differentiation.

Background: The overall view of erythropoiesis remains unclear.

Results: Overexpression of α-1,6-fucosyltransferase inhibits hemoglobin production in murine and human erythroleukemia cells; down-regulation of α-1,6-fucosyltransferase promotes hemoglobin production and erythroid differentiation of human erythroleukemia cells.

Conclusion: Core fucosylation plays an important role in hemoglobin production and erythroid differentiation.

Significance: This might be the first finding that glycosylation negatively regulates erythroid differentiation.

Erythropoeisis
Functional Genomics
Glycosyltransferases
Hemoglobin
Transcriptomics

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*

This work was supported by Bio Matrix Research Inc.

This article contains supplemental material.