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1.
We and others have recently described 9-O-acetyl-sialic acid esterase (9-O-Ac-SA esterase) activities that appear to be specific for removal of O-acetyl esters from the 9-position of naturally occurring sialic acids. We have now examined a variety of species for such enzymes and found them in vertebrates and higher invertebrates, but not in plants or in lower invertebrates. This evolutionary distribution correlates well with that of the sialic acids themselves. All of the 9-O-Ac-SA esterase activities tested were inhibited by diisopropyl fluorophosphate (DFP) in a dose-dependent fashion. This indicates that each of these enzymes has a serine active site similar to the well known serine esterases and serine proteases. Methyl esterification of the carboxyl group of 9-O-acetyl-N-acetylneuraminic acid significantly reduced the activity of all of the 9-O-Ac-SA esterases against the O-acetyl group. This indicates that each of these enzymes may recognize the negatively charged carboxyl group of the sialic acid. Enzymes that recognize anionic substrates frequently have an essential arginine residue (Riordan, J. F., McElvany, K. D., and Borders, C. L., Jr. (1977) Science 195, 884-886). We therefore studied the effects of the arginine-specific modifying reagents 2,3-butanedione and phenylglyoxal on 9-O-Ac-SA esterase activities from influenza C virus, human erythrocytes, rat liver, starfish gonads, and sea bass brain. All of these enzymes were inhibited in a dose-dependent fashion by both reagents, under conditions previously known to avoid nonspecific modification. In contrast, the typical serine proteases trypsin and kallikrein and the serine esterase acetylcholinesterase were not significantly affected, even by the highest concentrations of these reagents used. These data indicate that five 9-O-Ac-SA esterase activities from evolutionarily distinct origins all have serine active sites and essential arginine residues. We postulate that the arginine residue is involved in substrate recognition via the negatively charged carboxyl group of the sialic acids. Thus, these 9-O-Ac-SA esterase activities may be members of a previously undescribed class of serine esterase.  相似文献   

2.
A cytosolic sialic acid-specific O-acetyl-esterase was previously described that can remove O-acetyl esters from the 9-position of sialic acids. We show that rat liver Golgi vesicles contain a distinct sialic acid-esterase located within the lumen of the same vesicles that add O-acetyl esters to sialic acids. Studies of a retinoblastoma cell line genetically deficient in the cytosolic enzyme also confirm the existence of distinct membrane-associated sialic acid esterase activity. We developed a sensitive, specific and facile assay, which measures release of [3H]acetyl groups from [3H-acetyl]9-O-acetyl-N-acetylneuraminic acid. Using this assay, we show that rat liver membranes may contain different sialic acid O-acetyl-esterases. The membrane-associated enzyme(s) bind to Concanavalin A Sepharose, whereas the cytosolic enzyme does not. Membrane-bound and cytosolic esterases are inactivated by di-isopropyl-fluorophosphate, showing they are serine-active-site enzymes.  相似文献   

3.
We have previously shown that radioactivity from [acetyl-3H]AcCoA is concentrated into isolated intact rat liver Golgi vesicles. The incorporated radioactivity occurred in acid-soluble and acid-insoluble components, and the acid-insoluble fraction included O-acetylated sialic acids (Varki, A., and Diaz, S. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 6600-6608). Nearly all of the protein-associated radioactivity was found to be in sialic acids alpha 2-6-linked to N-linked oligosaccharides on endogenous glycoproteins. Incubation of the vesicles with CMP-[3H]sialic acid resulted in labeling of a very similar group of glycoproteins. The 3H-O-acetyl groups were found at both the 7- and the 9-positions of N-acetylneuraminic acid residues at the end of the labeling reaction. Although 7-O-acetyl groups can undergo migration to the 9-position under physiological conditions, kinetic studies using O-acetyl-14C-labeled internal and O-acetyl-3H-labeled external standards indicate that during the labeling, release, and purification, negligible migration occurred. Studies with mild periodate oxidation provided further confirmation that O-acetyl esters are added directly to both the 7- and the 9-positions of the sialic acids in this system. The acid-soluble, low molecular weight component is released from the vesicles by increasing concentrations of saponin, and its exit parallels that of CMP-[14C]sialic acid taken up during the incubation. The vesicles themselves are impermeant to free acetate. However, even after short incubations, this saponin-releasable radioactivity was almost exclusively in [3H] acetate and not in [3H]acetyl-CoA. The apparent Km for accumulation of the [3H]acetate is almost identical with that for the generation of the acid-insoluble O-acetylated sialic acids. Most of this accumulation of free acetate is also blocked by coenzyme A-SH. Only a small portion arises from the action of an endogenous esterase on the 3H-O-acetylated sialic acids. Taken together, the results indicate that accumulation of free [3H]acetate occurs within the lumen of the vesicles in parallel with O-acetylation of sialic acids and is probably a product of abortive acetylation. It is not known if this reaction occurs in vivo. Permeabilization of Golgi vesicles to low molecular weight molecules with saponin does not alter the rate of acetylation substantially. Furthermore, double label studies suggest that the intact acetyl-CoA molecule does not gain access to the lumen of the vesicles. These results indicate that the acetylation reaction may have a different mechanism from previously described Golgi glycosylation reactions, wherein specific transporters concentrate sugar nucleotides for use by luminally oriented transferases.  相似文献   

4.
We and others previously described the melanoma-associated oncofetal glycosphingolipid antigen 9-O-acetyl-GD3, a disialoganglioside O-acetylated at the 9-position of the outer sialic acid residue. We have now developed methods to examine the biosynthesis and turnover of disialogangliosides in cultured melanoma cells and in Golgi-enriched vesicles from these cells. O-Acetylation was selectively expressed on di- and trisialogangliosides, but not on monosialogangliosides, nor on glycoprotein-bound sialic acids. Double-labeling of cells with [3H]acetate and [14C]glucosamine introduced easily detectable labels into each of the components of the ganglioside molecules. Pulse-chase studies of such doubly labeled molecules indicated that the O-acetyl groups turn over faster than the parent molecule. When Golgi-enriched vesicles from these cells were incubated with [acetyl-3H]acetyl-coenzyme A, the major labeled products were disialogangliosides. [Acetyl-3H]O-acetyl groups were found at both the 7- and the 9-positions, indicating that both 7-O-acetyl GD3 and 9-O-acetyl GD3 were synthesized by the action of O-acetyltransferase(s) on endogenous GD3. Analysis of the metabolically labeled molecules confirmed the existence of both 7- and 9-O-acetylated GD3 in the intact cells. Surprisingly, the major 3H-labeled product of the in vitro labeling reaction was not O-acetyl-GD3, but GD3, with the label exclusively in the sialic acid residues. Fragmentation of the labeled sialic acids by enzymatic and chemical methods showed that the 3H-label was exclusively in [3H]N-acetyl groups. Analyses of the double-labeled sialic acids from intact cells also showed that the 3H-label from [3H]acetate was exclusively in the form of [3H]N-acetyl groups, whereas the 14C-label was at the 4-position. Pulse-chase analysis of the 3H/14C ratio showed that the N-acetyl groups of both GD3 and of the monosialoganglioside GM3 were turning over faster than the parent molecules. Selective periodate oxidation showed that both the inner and outer sialic acid residues of GD3 incorporated 3H-label in the in vitro reaction, and showed similar turnover of N-acetylation in the pulse-chase study. Taken together, these results indicate that both the O- and N-acetyl groups of the sialic acid residues of gangliosides turn over faster than the parent molecules. They also demonstrate a novel re-N-acetylation reaction that predicts the existence of de-N-acetyl gangliosides in melanoma cells.  相似文献   

5.
From bovine brain an esterase was purified 2,600-fold in an overall yield of 5.6%. For the isolation ion-exchange chromatographies, gel filtration, and preparative isoelectric focusing were used. The molecular mass is 56 kDa after gel chromatography on Sephacryl S-200 and 51 kDa after HPLC, the pH-optimum at 7.4, and the isoelectric point in the range of pH 5.8-6.1, as estimated from preparative isoelectric focusing. The substrate specificity of this enzyme was tested with various naturally occurring O-acylated sialic acids, synthetic carbohydrate acetates, and other esters. Besides aromatic acetyl esters such as e.g. alpha-naphthyl acetate, the highest preference was for N-acetyl-9-O-acetylneuraminic acid, followed by N-acetyl-4-O-acetylneuraminic acid. Other primary acetyl esters such as 6-O-acetylated D-glucose and 2-acetamido-2-deoxy-D-mannose were not hydrolyzed. The 9-O-acetyl derivative of the naturally occurring unsaturated sialic acid 2-deoxy-2,3-didehydro-N-acetylneuraminic acid, however, is a substrate for this esterase. Whereas N-acetyl-9-O-acetylneuraminic acid as a component of sialyllactose is nearly as well hydrolyzed as the corresponding free sialic acid, O-acetylated sialoglycoconjugates with high molecular weights (mucins, serum glycoproteins, gangliosides) are not hydrolyzed by this esterase. N-Acetylated sialic acids are better substrates than the analogous N-glycoloyl derivatives. Esterification of the carboxyl function of sialic acids prevents the action of the esterase on the O-acetyl groups. The enzyme has no carboxyl esterase or amidase activity, and does not act on acetylcholine. It hydrolyzes almost exclusively acetyl esters. Inhibition studies suggest that it has a catalytically active serine residue.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
Shi  WX; Chammas  R; Varki  A 《Glycobiology》1998,8(2):199-205
Sialic acids can be modified by O-acetyl esters at the 7- and/or 9- position, altering recognition by antibodies, lectins and viruses. 9(7)- O-acetylation is mediated by a sialic acid-specific O- acetyltransferase, which has proven difficult to purify. Two groups have recently isolated cDNAs possibly encoding this enzyme, by expression cloning of human melanoma libraries in COS cells expressing the substrate ganglioside GD3. Pursuing a similar approach, we have isolated additional clones that can induce 9-O-acetylation. One clone present in a melanoma library encodes a fusion protein between a bacterial tetracycline resistance gene repressor and a sequence reported to be part of the P3 plasmid. Expression of the open reading frame is necessary for inducing 9-O-acetylation, indicating that this is not a reaction to the introduction of bacterial DNA. Another clone from a rat liver cDNA library induced 9-O-acetylation on COS cells expressing alpha2-6-linked sialic acids, and encodes an open reading frame identical to the Vitamin D binding protein. However, truncation at the 5' end eliminates the amino-terminal hydrophobic signal sequence, predicting cytosolic hyperexpression of a truncated protein. Thus, diverse types of cDNAs can indirectly induce sialic acid 9-O- acetylation in the COS cell system, raising the possibility that the real enzyme may be composed of multiple subunits which would not be amenable to expression cloning. Importantly, the cDNAs we isolated are highly specific in their ability to induce 9-O-acetylation either on alpha2-6-linked sialic acids of glycoproteins (truncated vitamin D binding protein) or on the alpha2-8-linked sialic acids of gangliosides (Tetrfusion protein). These data confirm our prior suggestion that a family of O-acetyltransferases with distinctive substrate specificities exists in mammalian systems.   相似文献   

7.
The transfer of sialic acids (Sia) from CMP-sialic acid (CMP-Sia) to N-linked sugar chains is thought to occur as a final step in their biosynthesis in the trans portion of the Golgi apparatus. In some cell types such Sia residues can have O-acetyl groups added to them. We demonstrate here that rat hepatocytes express 9-O-acetylated Sias mainly at the plasma membranes of both apical (bile canalicular) and basolateral (sinusoidal) domains. Golgi fractions also contain 9-O-acetylated Sias on similar N-linked glycoproteins, indicating that O-acetylation may take place in the Golgi. We show here that CMP-Sia-FITC (with a fluorescein group attached to the Sia) is taken up by isolated intact Golgi compartments. In these preparations, Sia-FITC is transferred to endogenous glycoprotein acceptors and can be immunochemically detected in situ. Addition of unlabeled UDP-Gal enhances Sia-FITC incorporation, indicating a substantial overlap of beta-galactosyltransferase and sialyltransferase machineries. Moreover, the same glycoproteins that incorporate Sia-FITC also accept [3H]galactose from the donor UDP-[3H]Gal. In contrast, we demonstrate with three different approaches (double-labeling, immunoelectron microscopy, and addition of a diffusible exogenous acceptor) that sialyltransferase and O-acetyltransferase machineries are much more separated from one another. Thus, 9-O-acetylation occurs after the last point of Sia addition in the trans-Golgi network. Indeed, we show that 9-O-acetylated sialoglycoproteins are preferentially segregated into a subset of vesicular carriers that concentrate membrane-bound, but not secretory, proteins.  相似文献   

8.
The parent sialic acid N-acetylneuraminic acid can be modified or substituted in various ways, giving rise to a family of more than 25 compounds. The definitive identification of these compounds has previously required isolation of nanomole amounts for mass spectrometry or NMR. We have explored the possibility of using the known metabolic precursors of the sialic acids, particularly N-acetyl-[6-3H]mannosamine, to label and identify various forms of sialic acids in tissue culture cells. Firstly, we defined several variables that affect the labeling of sialic acids with N-acetyl-[6-3H]mannosamine. Secondly, we have devised a simple screening method to identify cell lines that synthesize substituted or modified sialic acids. We next demonstrate that it is possible to definitively identify the natures of the various labeled sialic acids without the use of mass spectrometry, even though they are present only in tracer amounts. The methods used include paper chromatography, analytical de-O-acetylation, periodate release of the 9-3H as [3H]formaldehyde (which is subsequently converted to a specific 3H-labeled chromophore), acylneuraminate pyruvate lyase treatment with identification of [3H]acylmannosamines, gas-liquid chromatography with radioactive detection, and two new high-pressure liquid chromatography methods utilizing the amine-adsorption:ion suppression and ion-pair principles. The use of an internal N-acetyl-[4-14C]neuraminic acid standard in each of these methods assures precision and accuracy. The combined use of these methods now allows the identification of radioactive tracer amounts of the various types of sialic acids in well-defined populations of tissue culture cells; it may also allow the identification of hitherto unknown forms of sialic acids.  相似文献   

9.
An esterase was isolated from influenza C virus with a specific activity from 1.7-5 U/mg protein, and its substrate specificity was tested with various naturally occurring O-acylated sialic acids, synthetic carbohydrate acetates, and other esters. The enzyme hydrolyses only acetic acid esters at significant rates. The non-natural substrates 4-methyl-umbelliferyl acetate, 4-nitrophenyl acetate, and alpha-naphthyl acetate are cleaved at highest hydrolysis rates, followed by the natural substrate N-acetyl-9-O-acetylneuraminic acid. The esterase also acts on N-glycoloyl-9-O-acetylneuraminic acid and, much slower, on N-acetyl-4-O-acetylneuraminic acid; N-acetyl-7-O-acetylneuraminic acid is not hydrolysed. 2-Deoxy-2,3-didehydro-N-acetyl-9-O-acetylneuraminic acid is also a substrate for this enzyme, however, 6-O-acetylated N-acetylmannosamine and glucose are not. Esterification of the carboxyl function of sialic acids strongly reduces or prevents esterase action on O-acetyl groups. The carboxyl ester is not hydrolysed. The relative cleavage rates also depend on the type of the non-sialic acid part of the molecule. N-Acetyl-9-O-acetylneuraminic acid as component of sialyllactose and rat serum glycoprotein shows hydrolysis rates close to the free form of this sugar, while acetyl ester groups of bovine submandibular gland mucin and rat erythrocytes are hydrolysed at slower rates. Gangliosides and 4-O-acetylated glycoproteins are no substrates for the purified enzyme. A slow hydrolysis is observed by incubation of 9-O-acetylated GD1a with intact influenza C viruses. As other natural acetyl esters (acetyl-CoA and acetylthiocholine iodide) are not hydrolysed, the enzyme can be classified as sialate 9(4)-O-acetylesterase (EC 3.1.1.53).  相似文献   

10.
Infectious salmon anemia virus (ISAV) is an unclassified Orthomyxovirus that has been shown to contain a segmented genome with eight single-stranded RNA species coding for 10 viral proteins. Four major structural proteins were characterized in the present study: two glycosylated proteins with estimated molecular masses of 42 and 50 kDa, one 66-kDa phosphoprotein, and one 22-kDa protein. Examination of lysed virions revealed the two glycoproteins and the 22-kDa protein in the soluble fraction, while the 66-kDa phosphoprotein and a minor part of the 22-kDa protein were found in the pelleted fraction. Immunofluorescence staining of infected cells demonstrated that the 22-kDa protein was a late protein accumulating in the nucleus. We conclude that the 66-kDa protein is the nucleoprotein, the 22-kDa protein is the matrix protein, and the 42- and 50-kDa proteins are the surface proteins. Radioimmunoprecipitation analysis of the 42-kDa glycoprotein, which was previously shown to represent the ISAV hemagglutinin, indicated that this protein exists at least as dimers. Further, by labeling of purified ISAV with [1,3-(3)H]diisopropyl fluorophosphate, it was also demonstrated that the viral esterase is located with the hemagglutinin. This finding was confirmed by demonstration of acetylesterase activity in affinity-purified hemagglutinin preparations. Finally, the active-site serine residue could be tentatively identified at position 32 within the amino acid sequence of the hemagglutinin of ISAV strain Glesvaer/2/90. It is proposed that the ISAV vp66 protein be termed nucleoprotein, the gp42 protein be termed HE protein, and the vp22 protein be termed matrix protein.  相似文献   

11.
CD22 beta is a B cell-restricted phosphoprotein expressed on the surface of mature resting B cells. It mediates interactions with other cells partly or exclusively via recognition of alpha 2-6-linked sialic acids on glycoconjugates. The sialylated N-linked oligosaccharides recognized best by CD22 beta are common to many glycoproteins, suggesting that additional regulatory mechanisms may exist. Since the exocyclic side chain of sialic acid is required for recognition, we explored the effects of a naturally occurring modification of the side chain, 9-O-acetylation. Semisynthetic N-linked oligosaccharides terminating with 9-O-acetylated, alpha 2-6-linked sialic acids showed markedly reduced binding to CD22 beta relative to their non-O- acetylated counterparts. Murine lymphoid cells were probed for natural CD22 beta ligands that might be O-acetylated using recombinant soluble forms of CD22 beta (CD22 beta Rg) and influenza C esterase (CHE-Fc, which specifically removes 9-O-acetyl esters from sialic acids). By flow cytometry analysis, CD22 beta Rg binding to splenic B cells and a subset of T cells was increased by pretreatment with CHE-Fc, indicating that some potential CD22 beta ligands are naturally "masked" by 9-O- acetylation. Unmasking of these CD22 beta ligands by removal of 9-O- acetyl esters from intact splenocytes substantially increases their CD22 beta-dependent adhesion in an in vitro adhesion assay. Probing of murine lymphoid tissue sections by CD22 beta Rg and CHE-Fc treatment demonstrates regionally restricted and differentially expressed patterns of distribution between masked and unmasked ligands. For example, lymph node-associated follicular B cells express high levels of CD22 beta ligands, none of which are masked by 9-O-acetylation. In contrast, the ligands on lymph node-associated dendritic cells are almost completely masked by 9-O-acetylation, suggesting that masking may regulate interactions between CD22 beta-positive B cells and dendritic cells. In the thymus, only medullary cells express CD22 beta ligands, and a significant portion of these are masked by 9-O- acetylation, particularly at the cortical-medullary junction. Thus, 9-O- acetylation of sialic acids on immune cells is in a position to negatively regulate CD22 beta adhesion events in a manner depending on both cell type and tissue localization.  相似文献   

12.
The structures of sulfated N-linked oligosaccharides have been reported for a few specific proteins. We recently demonstrated that such oligosaccharides occur in many different types of tissue culture cell lines (Freeze, H. H., and Varki, A. (1986) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 140, 967-973). Here we report improved methods to metabolically label cell lines with 35SO4 and to release sulfated N-linked oligosaccharides with peptide:N-glycosidase F as well as the partial structure of some of these novel oligosaccharides. The released 35SO4-labeled chains from Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells and bovine pulmonary artery endothelial cells (CPAE) were characterized by gel filtration, anion exchange and lectin affinity chromatography, and various enzymatic and chemical treatments. Each cell line contains a class of sulfated oligosaccharide chains bearing from two to six negative charges in varying combinations of O-sulfate esters and sialic acids. These molecules represent a significant proportion of both the total 35SO4 label and the total anionic N-linked oligosaccharides. They are also relatively enriched in a CHO mutant that is deficient in glycosaminoglycan chain synthesis. Lectin affinity chromatography of such molecules from CPAE cells indicates that the majority are sialylated multiantennary complex-type chains. The sulfate esters are exclusively of the primary type. Sequential exoglycosidase digestions, including beta-hexosaminidase A treatment at low pH, demonstrate that at least one-third of these sulfate esters are found in the following structure, (formula; see text) where R is the remainder of the underlying oligosaccharide, and SA is sialic acid. In addition to these molecules, a more highly charged group of sulfated N-linked oligosaccharides sharing structural features with glycosaminoglycans was found in CPAE cells, but not in CHO cells. These are described in the following paper (Sundblad, G., Holojda, S., Roux, L., Varki, A., and Freeze, H. H. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 8890-8896).  相似文献   

13.
Proteinases capable of cleaving proenkephalin into smaller peptides have been identified in bovine adrenal chromaffin granules using [35S]methionine-labeled recombinant rat proenkephalin as a selective substrate in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis proteinase radiozymography. This technique was used for the screening of subcellular fractions, general characterization of pH optima, and the mechanistic characterization of proteinases with both reversible and irreversible inhibitors. Two enzymes with approximate molecular masses of 76 and 30 kDa were shown to be localized to the highest-density fractions of chromaffin granules by sucrose density gradient fractionation. Both were enriched in a 1 M NaCl wash of purified chromaffin granule membranes, were active at high pH, and were characterized as serine proteinases based on inhibition by soybean trypsin inhibitor. The 30-kDa enzyme was also inhibited by diisopropyl fluorophosphate, D-Phe-Pro-Arg-CH2Cl, and D-Val-Phe-Lys-CH2Cl and appeared to be the previously described adrenal trypsin-like enzyme. A third enzyme, of 66 kDa, was also associated with the 1 M NaCl wash of purified chromaffin granule membranes but was not localized exclusively to chromaffin granules in sucrose gradients. This proteinase was found to be Ca2+ activated and inhibited by EDTA but not diisopropyl fluorophosphate, soybean trypsin inhibitor, p-chloromercuriphenylsulfonic acid, 1,10-phenanthroline, or pepstatin.  相似文献   

14.
Acyl-peptide hydrolase from rat liver. Characterization of enzyme reaction   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Acyl-peptide hydrolase, which catalyzes the hydrolysis of an N-terminally acetylated peptide to release an N-acetylamino acid, was isolated from rat liver and found to be N-terminally blocked. The kinetics of the hydrolysis of acetyl (Ac)-Ala-Ala, Ac-Ala-Ala-Ala, acetylalanine p-nitroanilide, and acetylalanine beta-naphthylamide were investigated. The Km values were between 1 and 9 mM, and the Vmax values were between 100 and 500 nmol/min/micrograms of enzyme. The enzyme activity toward acetylalanine p-nitroanilide and acetylalanine beta-naphthylamide was activated by the presence of Cl- and SCN- at concentrations between 0.1 and 0.5 M. By contrast, the activity toward Ac-Ala-Ala and Ac-Ala-Ala-Ala was inhibited by these anions. Among a series of divalent cations, Zn2+ was demonstrated to be the most potent inhibitor. The enzyme was inactivated by the addition of diisopropyl fluorophosphate, diethyl pyrocarbonate. Woodward's Reagent K, and glycine methyl ester/carbodiimide. Titration by diisopropyl fluorophosphate showed 0.7 mol of active serine/mol of enzyme subunit, which was confirmed by the incorporation of [3H]diisopropyl fluorophosphate into the enzyme. Acetylalanine chloromethyl ketone inactivated the enzyme following pseudo-first order kinetics; and Ac-Ala, a competitive inhibitor, protected the enzyme from this inactivation. Acyl-peptide hydrolase appears to be a serine protease utilizing a charge relay system involving serine, histidine, and, probably, a carboxyl group(s). Two series of acetyl dipeptides, acetylamino acid p-nitroanilides and acetylamino acid beta-naphthylamides, were prepared in order to determine enzyme specificity. The enzyme preferentially removed Ac-Ala, Ac-Met, and Ac-Ser, the most common acetylated N-terminal residues (Persson, B., Flinta, C., von Heijne, G., and J?rnvall, H. (1985) Eur. J. Biochem. 152, 523-527). The enzyme was shown to be useful for deblocking peptides (e.g. alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone and acetyl-renin substrate), and the crude enzyme/substrate mixtures were amenable to direct protein sequence analysis.  相似文献   

15.
A Stoddart  Y Zhang    C J Paige 《Nucleic acids research》1996,24(20):4003-4008
We describe the isolation of a cDNA encoding a murine sialic acid-specific 9-O-acetylesterase as well as its expression pattern in cells of both hematopoietic and non-hematopoietic origin. This enzyme catalyzes the removal of O-acetyl ester groups from position 9 of the parent sialic acid N-acetylneuraminic acid. The cDNA is 2105 nt in length and encodes a protein of 541 amino acids with a predicted molecular weight of 61 kDa, not including oligosaccharides linked to eight potential N-glycosylation sites. The cDNA encoding the acetylesterase displays a widespread distribution in various cell lines and tissues. Expression studies of B lineage cell lines and primary fetal liver cells revealed a developmentally regulated expression pattern in cells of hematopoietic origin. Given the importance of 9-O-acetylation of sialic acids, the cloning of the cDNA encoding a sialic acid-specific 9-O-acetylesterase will be helpful in understanding further the regulation of this post-translational modification and the biological consequences thereof.  相似文献   

16.
Ingensin, a fatty acid-activated serine proteinase from rat liver cytosol   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The enzyme responsible for the succinylleucylleucylvalyltyrosine methylcoumarylamide- (SLLVT-) degrading activity was purified from the postmitochondrial supernatant of rat liver (Yamamoto, T., Nojima, M., Ishiura, S. and Sugita, H. (1986) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 882, 297-304). The enzyme, named ingensin, was activated by saturated fatty acids, especially myristic acid, as well as by unsaturated linoleic acid and arachidonic acid. Although 2-mercaptoethanol activated ingensin 2-fold and p-chloromercuribenzoate and HgCl2 completely inhibited its peptide-hydrolyzing activity, the enzyme is activated by the addition of a thiol-blocking reagent, monoiodoacetic acid. Ingensin was also inhibited by a specific serine proteinase inhibitor, diisopropyl fluorophosphate, but not by a specific cysteine proteinase inhibitor, E-64-c. These results suggest that the enzyme is a serine proteinase with an active thiol group(s) near the active site. We have found that the addition of glycerol and nordihydroguaiaretic acid lowered the extent of its activation by fatty acids as well as its intrinsic peptide-hydrolyzing activity.  相似文献   

17.
A decrease in the level of O-acetylated sialic acids observed in colorectal carcinoma may lead to an increase in the expression of sialyl Lewis(X), a tumor-associated antigen, which is related to progression of colorectal cancer to metastasis. The underlying mechanism for this reduction is, however, not fully understood. Two enzymes are thought to be primarily responsible for the turnover of O-acetyl ester groups on sialic acids; sialate-O-acetyltransferase (OAT) and sialate-O-acetylesterase (OAE). We have previously reported the characterization of OAT activity from normal colon mucosa, which efficiently O-acetylates CMP-Neu5Ac exclusively in the Golgi apparatus prior to the action of sialyltransferase. In this report we describe the identification of a lysosomal and a cytosolic OAE activity in human colonic mucosa that specifically hydrolyses 9-O-acetyl groups on sialic acid. Utilizing matched resection margin and cancer tissue from colorectal carcinoma patients we provide strong evidence suggesting that the level of O-acetylated sialic acids present in normal and diseased human colon may be dependent on the relative activities of OAT to lysosomal OAE. Furthermore, we show that the level of free cytosolic Neu5,9Ac2 in human colon is regulated by the relative activity of the cytosolic OAE.  相似文献   

18.
A mixture of N-acetyl-[4,5,6,7,8,9-14C]neuraminosyl-alpha (2-3(6]-galactosyl-beta (1-4-glucose[( 14C]sialyl-lactose) and N-acetylneuraminosyl-alpha (2-3(6]-galactosyl-beta(1-4)-glucit-1-[3H]ol(sialyl-[3H]lactitol) as well as porcine submandibular gland mucin labeled with N-acetyl- and N-glycoloyl-[9-(3)H]neuraminic acid were administered orally to mice. The distribution of the different isotopes was followed in blood, tissues and excretion products of the animals. One half of the [14C]sialyl-lactose/sialyl-[3H]lactitol mixture given orally was excreted unchanged in the urine. The other half was hydrolysed by sialidase and partly metabolized further, followed by the excretion of 30% of the 14C-radioactivity as free N-acetyl-[4,5,6,7,8,9-14C]neuraminic acid and 60% of this radioactivity in the form of non-anionic compounds including expired 14CO2 within 24 h. The 14C-radioactivity derived from the [14C]sialyl-lactose/sialyl-[3H]lactitol mixture which remained in the bodies of fasted mice after 24 h was less than 1%. In the case of well-fed mice, a higher amount of the sialic acid residues was metabolized. The bulk of radioactivity of the mucin was resorbed within 24 h. About 40% of the radioactivity administered was excreted by the urine within 48 h; 30% of this radioactivity represented sialic acid and 70% other anionic and non-anionic metabolic products. 60% of the radioactivity administered remained in the body, and bound 3H-labeled sialic acids were isolated from liver. Sialyl-alpha (2-3)-[3H]lactitol was injected intravenously into rats; the substance was rapidly excreted in the urine without decomposition. These studies show that part of the sialic acids bound to oligosaccharides and glycoproteins can be hydrolysed in intestine by sialidase and be resorbed. This is followed either by excretion as free sialic acid or by metabolization at variable degrees, which apparently depends on the compound fed and on the retention time in the digestive tract.  相似文献   

19.
The occurrence of sialic acids in the free-living nematode Panagrellus redivivus was studied by periodate oxidation/[3H]sodium borohydride reduction of about 10(7) nematodes. In parallel, the capability of sialic acid biosynthesis was examined by metabolic labeling of the same number of nematodes with N-[3H]acetylmannosamine. In both experiments, radioactivity was incorporated into the nematodes. Mild acid hydrolysis, however, did not release radioactively labeled sialic acids or derivatives as tested by radio thin-layer chromatography, suggesting that P. redivivus does not contain or synthesize sialic acids.  相似文献   

20.
In the preceding two papers, we described two new classes of sulfated N-linked oligosaccharides isolated from total cellular 35SO4-labeled macromolecules of different mammalian cell lines. The first class carries various combinations of sialic acids and 6-O-sulfate esters on typical complex-type chains, while the second carries heparin and heparan-like sequences. In this study, we have characterized a sulfophosphoglycoprotein of 140 kDa from FG-Met-2 pancreatic cancer cells whose oligosaccharides share some properties of both these classes. The molecule was localized to the cell surface by electron microscopy using a monoclonal antibody (S3-53) and by cell surface 125I-labeling. Metabolic labeling of the cells with radioactive glucosamine, methionine, inorganic sulfate, or phosphate all demonstrated a single 140-kDa molecule. Pulse-chase analysis and tunicamycin treatment indicated the glycosylation of a putative primary translation product of 110 kDa via an intermediate (120 kDa) to the mature form (140 kDa). Digestion with peptide:N-glycosidase F (PNGaseF) indicated a minimum of four N-linked glycosylation sites. PNGaseF released more than 90% of the [6-3H]GlcNH2 label and 40-70% of 35SO4 label from the immunoprecipitated 140-kDa molecule. The isolated oligosaccharides were characterized as described in the preceding two papers. The majority of [6-3H]GlcNH2-labeled molecules were susceptible to neuraminidase. More than 50% of the 35SO4 label was associated with only 5-10% of the 3H-labeled chains. Some of the sulfated chains were partly sialylated molecules with four to five negative charges. Treatment with nitrous acid released about 25% of the 35SO4 label as free sulfate, together with 6% of the [6-3H]GlcNH2 label, indicating the presence of N-sulfated glucosamine residues. Some of these oligosaccharides were degraded by heparinase and heparitinase. Therefore, while they are not as highly charged as typical heparin or heparan chains, they must share structural features that permit recognition by the enzymes. Thus, this 140-kDa glycoprotein contains at least four asparagine-linked chains substituted with a heterogeneous mixture of sulfated sequences. The heterogeneity of these molecules is as extensive as that described for whole-cell sulfated N-linked oligosaccharides in the preceding two papers.  相似文献   

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