The hydatidiform mole (HM) is a placental pathology of androgenetic origin. Placental villi have an abnormal hyperproliferation event and hydropic degeneration. Three situations can be envisaged at its origin: 1. The destruction/expulsion of the female pronucleus at the time of fertilization by 1 or 2 spermatozoa with the former being followed by an endoreplication of the male pronucleus leading to a complete hydatidiform mole (CHM) 2. A triploid zygote (fertilization by 2 spermatozoa) leading to a partial hydatidiform mole (PHM) but can also lead to haploid and diploid clones. The diploid clone may produce a normal fetus while the haploid clone after endoreplication generates a CHM 3. A nutritional defect during the differentiation of the oocytes or the deterioration of the limited oxygen pressure during the first trimester of gestation may lead to the formation of a HM.In countries with poor medical health care system, moles (mainly the CHM) can become invasive or, in rare cases, lead to gestational choriocarcinomas.
The Le(x) oligosaccharide is expressed in organ buds progressing in mesenchyma, during human embryogenesis. Myeloid-like alpha3-fucosyltransferases are good candidates to synthesize this oligosaccharide. We investigated by Northern analysis all the alpha3-fucosyltransferase gene transcripts and only FUT4 and FUT9 were detected. The enzymes encoded by the FUT4 and FUT9 genes are the first alpha3-fucosyltransferases strongly expressed during the first two months of embryogenesis. The Northern profile of expression of the embryo FUT4 transcripts is similar in size and sequence to the known FUT4 transcripts of 6 kb, 3 kb, and 2.3 kb, but a new FUT9 transcript of 2501 bp, different from the known mouse (2170 bp) and human (3019 bp) transcripts was cloned. FUT3, FUT5, FUT6, and FUT7 were not detected by Northern blot. The FUT3 and FUT6 transcripts start to appear at this stage, but are only detected by reverse transcriptase-PCR analysis. The expression of FUT5 is weaker than FUT3 and FUT6 and the RT-PCR signal is faint and irregular. FUT7 is not detected at all. Using mRNA from 40- to 65-day-old embryos, we have prepared different hexamer and oligo-dT cDNA libraries and cloned, by rapid amplification cDNA ends-PCR, FUT4 and FUT9 alpha3-fucosyltransferase transcripts. The tissue expression of the embryonic FUT9 transcript is closer to that observed for the mouse (brain), than to the known human (stomach) transcripts. The acceptor specificity and the kinetics of the alpha3-fucosyltransferase encoded by this FUT9 transcript are similar to the FUT4 enzyme, except for the utilization of the lac-di-NAc acceptor which is not efficiently transformed by the FUT9 enzyme. Like FUT4, this embryonic FUT9 is N-ethylmaleimide and heat resistant and the corresponding gene was confirmed to be localized in the chromosome band 6q16. Finally, this FUT9 transcript has a single expressed exon as has been observed for most of the other vertebrate alpha2- and alpha3-fucosyltransferases.
We report the cloning of three splice variants of the FUT10 gene, encoding for active ␣-L-fucosyltransferase-isoforms of 391, 419, and 479 amino acids, and two splice variants of the FUT11 gene, encoding for two related ␣-L-fucosyltransferases of 476 and 492 amino acids. The FUT10 and FUT11 appeared 830 million years ago, whereas the other ␣1,3-fucosyltransferases emerged 450 million years ago. FUT10-391 and FUT10-419 were expressed in human embryos, whereas FUT10-479 was cloned from adult brain and was not found in embryos. Recombinant FUT10-419 and FUT10-479 have a type II trans-membrane topology and are retained in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) by a membrane retention signal at their NH 2 termini. The FUT10-479 has, in addition, a COOH-ER membrane retention signal. The FUT10-391 is a soluble protein without a transmembrane domain or ER retention signal that transiently localizes to the Golgi and then is routed to the lysosome. After transfection in COS7 cells, the three FUT10s and at least one FUT11, link ␣-L-fucose onto conalbumin glycopeptides and biantennary N-glycan acceptors but not onto short lactosaminyl acceptor substrates as do classical monoexonic ␣1,3-fucosyltransferases. Modifications of the innermost core GlcNAc of the N-glycan, by substitution with ManNAc or with an opened GlcNAc ring or by the addition of an ␣1,6-fucose, suggest that the FUT10 transfer is performed on the innermost GlcNAc of the core chitobiose. We can exclude ␣1,3-fucosylation of the two peripheral GlcNAcs linked to the trimannosyl core of the acceptor, because the FUT10 fucosylated biantennary N-glycan product loses both terminal GlcNAc residues after digestion with human placenta ␣-N-acetylglucosaminidase.
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