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1.
A Thall  U Galili 《Biochemistry》1990,29(16):3959-3965
The study of the expression of Gal alpha 1----3Gal beta 1----4GlcNAc residues on mammalian glycoconjugates is of particular interest since as many as 1% of circulating IgG antibodies in man (the natural anti-Gal antibody) interact specifically with this carbohydrate residue. In recent studies, we have found that Gal alpha 1----3Gal beta 1----4GlcNAc residues are abundant on red cells and nucleated cells of nonprimate mammals, prosimians, and New World monkeys, but their expression is diminished in Old World monkeys, apes, and humans. In the present work, we have analyzed the expression of these residues on secreted mammalian glycoproteins. For this purpose, we have developed a radioimmunoassay (RIA) which enables the quantification of Gal alpha 1----3Gal beta 1----4GlcNAc residues on the secreted glycoproteins. Purified biotinylated anti-Gal was used as the antibody in the RIA, and bovine thyroglobulin enriched for Gal alpha 1----3Gal beta 1----4GlcNAc residues served as a solid-phase antigen. In this study, it is reported for the first time that the evolutionary pattern of Gal alpha 1----3Gal beta 1----4GlcNAc residue distribution in in vivo secreted glycoproteins is similar to that observed in membranes of cell lines and of red cells. Thyroglobulin, fibrinogen, or IgG molecules from nonprimate mammals and from New World monkeys express varying amounts of Gal alpha 1----3Gal beta 1----4GlcNAc residues ranging between 0.01 and 11 residues per molecule, whereas no such residues are present on any of these glycoproteins of human or Old World monkey origin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
We have isolated two overlapping cDNA clones that provide the complete nucleotide sequence coding for the NC-1 domain and 3'-untranslated region of the alpha 2 chain of human type IV collagen as well as a sequence encoding 232 residues of the collagenous domain. An extensive homology was observed between the sequences of the NC-1 domain of the alpha 1(IV) and alpha 2(IV) chains, but considerably less between the sequences encoding collagenous and 3'-untranslated regions. There were four interruptions in the collagenous sequence studied whereas the comparable region of the alpha 1(IV) chain had only two. A potential oligosaccharide attachment site was found in a 6-residue long interruption of the collagenous domain but none in the NC-1 domain.  相似文献   

3.
NC-1 and HNK-1, two mouse monoclonal antibodies raised against quail ciliary ganglion and a human leukemic cell-line, respectively, were found to display the same pattern of reactivity. Species investigated included human, rodents, birds and amphibians. In 1- to 3-day-old avian embryos, migrating crest cells are stained, whereas in older animals neuroepithelial cells and neurons are labelled. Staining with fluorescein isothiocyanate-conjugated NC-1 is blocked by preincubation with HNK-1. In immunoblot analyses both antibodies recognize the same pattern of bands which are different in central and peripheral nervous systems and vary during development. Thus, HNK-1/NC-1 provides a useful tool for investigating the ontogeny of neural and lymphocytic cells carrying this determinant, which, in view of its high degree of conservation during vertebrate evolution, may play an important part within the haematopoietic and nervous systems.  相似文献   

4.
The Japanese flounder (Paralichthys olivaceus) is a teleost fish with an XX/XY sex determination system. XX flounder can be induced to develop into phenotypic females or males, by rearing them at 18°C or 27°C, respectively, during the sex differentiation period. Therefore, the flounder provides an excellent model to study the molecular mechanisms underlying temperature-dependent sex determination. We previously showed that cortisol, the major glucocorticoid produced by the interrenal cells in teleosts, causes female-to-male sex reversal by directly suppressing mRNA expression of ovary-type aromatase (cyp19a1), a steroidogenic enzyme responsible for the conversion of androgens to estrogens in the gonads. Furthermore, an inhibitor of cortisol synthesis prevented masculinization of XX flounder at 27°C, suggesting that masculinization by high temperature is due to the suppression of cyp19a1 mRNA expression by elevated cortisol levels during gonadal sex differentiation in the flounder. In the present study, we found that exposure to high temperature during gonadal sex differentiation upregulates the mRNA expression of retinoid-degrading enzyme (cyp26b1) concomitantly with masculinization of XX gonads and delays meiotic initiation of germ cells. We also found that cortisol induces cyp26b1 mRNA expression and suppresses specific meiotic marker synaptonemal complex protein 3 (sycp3) mRNA expression in gonads during the sexual differentiation. In conclusion, these results suggest that exposure to high temperature induces cyp26b1 mRNA expression and delays meiotic initiation of germ cells by elevating cortisol levels during gonadal sex differentiation in Japanese flounder.  相似文献   

5.
This study describes the structural and ultrastructural characteristics of gonadal sex differentiation and expression of Vasa, a germline marker, in different developmental stages of embryos and newborn fry of the barred splitfin Chapalichthys encaustus, a viviparous freshwater teleost endemic to Mexico. In stage 2 embryos, the gonadal crest was established; gonadal primordia were located on the coelomic epithelium, formed by scarce germ and somatic cells. At stage 3, the undifferentiated gonad appeared suspended from the mesentery of the developing swimbladder and contained a larger number of germ and somatic cells. At stages 4 and 5, the gonads had groups of meiotic and non-meiotic germ cells surrounded by somatic cells; meiosis was evident from the presence of synaptonemal complexes. These stages constituted a transition towards differentiation. At stage 6 and at birth, the gonad was morphologically differentiated into an ovary or a testis. Ovarian differentiation was revealed by the presence of follicles containing meiotic oocytes, and testicular differentiation by the development of testicular lobules containing spermatogonia in mitotic arrest, surrounded by Sertoli cells. Nuage, electron-dense material associated with mitochondria, was observed in germ cells at all gonadal stages. The Vasa protein was detected in all of the previously described stages within the germ-cell cytoplasm. This is the first report on morphological characteristics and expression of the Vasa gene during sexual differentiation in viviparous species of the Goodeidae family. Chapalichthys encaustus may serve as a model to study processes of sexual differentiation in viviparous fishes and teleosts.  相似文献   

6.
Expression of the HNK-1/NC-1 epitope in early vertebrate neurogenesis   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Summary A family of glycoconjugates has recently been shown to share a common carbohydrate epitope recognized by the mouse monoclonal antibody HNK-1. The specificity of HNK-1 was found to be similar to that of another monoclonal antibody, NC-1. These two IgM monoclonal antibodies were raised after immunization of mice with a human T-cell line and avian neural crest-derived ganglia, respectively. The antigens recognized by these antibodies include the myelin-associated glycoprotein, MAG, a glycolipid of defined structure, and a set of molecules involved in cell adhesion. The timing and pattern of appearance of these antigens are distinct. Moreover, the epitope may be absent on an antigen at a given stage or in a given tissue. Therefore, although the molecules able to carry the NC-1/ HNK-1 epitope are numerous and expressed in various tissues, the use of the monoclonal antibodies on tissue sections has proven adequate for following the migration of avian neural crest cells, the major cell lineage recognized by NC-1 and HNK-1 during early embryogenesis. Analogies in several other species have been found on the basis of HNK-1 reactivity. In this study we show that NC-1 and HNK-1 can be used successfully to label migrating neural crest cells in dog, pig and human. On the other hand, the NC-l/HNK-1 epitope was not present on migrating crest cells in amphibians or mice and was found only transiently on the neural crest of rats.  相似文献   

7.
The distribution of 5-methyl cytosine (5-MeC) residues in a highly repetitive sequence, mouse major satellite, was examined in germinal versus somatic DNAs by digestion with the methylation sensitive isoschizomers Msp I and Hpa II and Southern blot analysis, using a cloned satellite probe. DNA from liver, brain, and a mouse fibroblast cell line, C3H 10T1/2, yielded a multimeric hybridization pattern after digestion with Msp I (and control Eco RI) but were resistant to digestion with Hpa II, reflecting a high level of methylation of the satellite sequences. In contrast, DNA from mature sperm was undermethylated at these same sequences as indicated by the ability of Hpa II to generate a multimeric pattern. DNAs from purified populations of testis cells in different stages of spermatogenesis were examined to determine when during germ cell differentiation the undermethylation was established. As early as in primitive type A, type A, and type B spermatogonia, an undermethylation of satellite sequences was observed. This suggest that this highly specific undermethylation of germ cell satellite DNA occurs very early in the germ cell lineage, prior to entry into meiosis.  相似文献   

8.
The germ cell lineage is first recognized as a population of mitotically proliferating primordial germ cells that migrate toward the gonadal ridge. Shortly after arriving at the gonadal ridge, the germ cells begin to initiate a commitment to gamete production in the developing gonad. The mechanisms controlling this transition are poorly understood. We recently reported that a mouse germ cell nuclear antigen 1 (GCNA1) is initially detected in both male and female germ cells as they reach the gonad at 11.5 days postcoitum (dpc). GCNA1 is continually expressed in germ cells through all stages of gametogenesis until the diplotene/dictyate stage of meiosis I. Since GCNA1 expression commences soon after primordial germ cells arrive at the gonadal ridge, we wanted to determine whether the gonadal environment was essential for induction of GCNA1 expression. By examining GCNA1 expression in germ cells that migrate ectopically into the adrenal gland, we determined that both the gonadal and adrenal gland environments allow GCNA1 expression. We also examined GCNA1 expression in Ftz-F1 null mice, which are born lacking gonads and adrenal glands. During embryonic development in the Ftz-F1 null mice, the gonad and most germ cells undergo apoptotic degeneration at about 12.5 dpc. While most of the germ cells undergo apoptosis without expressing GCNA1, a few surviving germs cells, especially outside the involuting gonad clearly express GCNA1. Thus, although the Ftz-F1 gene is essential for gonadal and adrenal development, induction of GCNA1 expression in germ cells does not require Ftz-F1 gene products. The finding that germ cell GCNA1 expression is not restricted to the gonadal environment and is not dependent on the Ftz-F1 gene products suggests that GCNA1 expression may be initiated in the germ cell lineage by autonomous means. Mol. Reprod. Dev. 48:154–158, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

9.
10.
In mouse embryos, germ cells arise during gastrulation and migrate to the early gonad. First, they emerge from the primitive streak into the region of the endoderm that forms the hindgut. Later in development, a second phase of migration takes place in which they migrate out of the gut to the genital ridges. There, they co-assemble with somatic cells to form the gonad. In vitro studies in the mouse, and genetic studies in other organisms, suggest that at least part of this process is in response to secreted signals from other tissues. Recent genetic evidence in zebrafish has shown that the interaction between stromal cell-derived factor 1 (SDF1) and its G-protein-coupled receptor CXCR4, already known to control many types of normal and pathological cell migrations, is also required for the normal migration of primordial germ cells. We show that in the mouse, germ cell migration and survival requires the SDF1/CXCR4 interaction. First, migrating germ cells express CXCR4, whilst the body wall mesenchyme and genital ridges express the ligand SDF1. Second, the addition of exogenous SDF1 to living embryo cultures causes aberrant germ cell migration from the gut. Third, germ cells in embryos carrying targeted mutations in CXCR4 do not colonize the gonad normally. However, at earlier stages in the hindgut, germ cells are unaffected in CXCR4(-/-) embryos. Germ cell counts at different stages suggest that SDF1/CXCR4 interaction also mediates germ cell survival. These results show that the SDF1/CXCR4 interaction is specifically required for the colonization of the gonads by primordial germ cells, but not for earlier stages in germ cell migration. This demonstrates a high degree of evolutionary conservation of part of the mechanism, but also an area of evolutionary divergence.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Cystatins are cysteine proteinase inhibitors,We found two expression sequence tags (ESTs),CA463109 and AV042522,from a mouse testis library using Digital differential display (DDD).By electricalhybridization,a novel gene,Cymgl(GenBank accession No.AY600990),which has a full length of 0.78 kb,and contains four exons and three introns,was cloned from a mouse testis eDNA library.The gene is locatedin the 2G3 area of chromosome 2.The full eDNA encompasses the entire open reading frame,encoding 141amino acid residues.The protein has a cysteine protease inhibitor domain that is related to the family 2cystatins but lacks critical consensus sites important for cysteine protease inhibition.These characteristicsare seen in the CRES subfamily,which are related to the family 2 cystatins and are expressed specifically inthe male reproductive tract.CYMG1 has a 44%(48/108)identity with mouse CRES and 30%(42/140)identity with mouse cystatin C.Northern blot analysis showed that the Cymgl is specifically expressed inadult mouse testes.Cell location studies showed that the GFP-tagged CYMG 1 protein was localized in thecytoplasm of HeLa cells,lmmunohistochemistry revealed that the CYMG1 protein was expressed in mousetestes spermatogonium,spermatocytes,round spermatids,elongating spermatids and spermatozoa.RT-PCRresults also showed that Cymgl was expressed in mouse testes and spermatogonium.The Cymgl expressionlevel varied in different developmental stages:it was low 1 week postpartum,steadily increased 2 to 5 weekspostpartum,and was highest 7 weeks postpartum.The expression level at 5 weeks postpartum was main-tained during 13 to 57 weeks postpartum.The Cymgl expression level in the testes over different develop-mental stages correlates with the mouse spermatogenesis and sexual maturation process.All these indicatethat Cymgl might play an important role in mouse spermatogenesis and sexual maturation. Cystatins are cysteine proteinase inhibitors,We found two expression sequence tags(ESTs),CA463109 and AV042522,from a mouse testis library using Digital differential display (DDD).By electricalhybridization,a novel gene,Cymgl(GenBank accession No.AY600990),which has a full length of 0.78 kb,and contains four exons and three introns,was cloned from a mouse testis eDNA library.The gene is locatedin the 2G3 area of chromosome 2.The full eDNA encompasses the entire open reading frame,encoding 141amino acid residues.The protein has a cysteine protease inhibitor domain that is related to the family 2cystatins but lacks critical consensus sites important for cysteine protease inhibition.These characteristicsare seen in the CRES subfamily,which are related to the family 2 cystatins and are expressed specifically inthe male reproductive tract.CYMG1 has a 44%(48/108)identity with mouse CRES and 30%(42/140)identity with mouse cystatin C.Northern blot analysis showed that the Cymgl is specifically expressed inadult mouse testes.Cell location studies showed that the GFP-tagged CYMG 1 protein was localized in thecytoplasm of HeLa cells,lmmunohistochemistry revealed that the CYMG1 protein was expressed in mousetestes spermatogonium,spermatocytes,round spermatids,elongating spermatids and spermatozoa.RT-PCRresults also showed that Cymgl was expressed in mouse testes and spermatogonium.The Cymgl expressionlevel varied in different developmental stages:it was low 1 week postpartum,steadily increased 2 to 5 weekspostpartum,and was highest 7 weeks postpartum.The expression level at 5 weeks postpartum was main-tained during 13 to 57 weeks postpartum.The Cymgl expression level in the testes over different develop-mental stages correlates with the mouse spermatogenesis and sexual maturation process.All these indicatethat Cymgl might play an important role in mouse spermatogenesis and sexual maturation.  相似文献   

13.
The aim of this work was the characterization of the glycoconjugates of the premeiotic spermatogenetic cells of the testis of an urodele amphibian, Pleurodeles waltl, by means of lectins in combination with several chemical and enzymatic procedures, in order to establish the distribution of N- and O-linked oligosaccharides in these cells. In the cytoplasm of the primordial germ cells, primary and secondary spermatogonia and primary spermatocytes, a granular structure can be observed close to the nucleus. These granules contain four types of sugar chains according to their appearance during the differentiation process: 1. some oligosaccharides that are identified in all the four cell types above mentioned, which include N-linked oligosaccharides with Fuc, Gal beta1,4GlcNAc and Neu5Ac alpha2,3Gal beta1,4GlcNAc and O-linked oligosaccharides with Gal beta1,4GlcNAc and Neu5Ac alpha2,3Gal beta1,4GlcNAc; 2. other glycan chains that are not present in the primary spermatocytes (N-linked oligosaccharides with DBA-positive GalNAc, GlcNAc, and a slight amount of Neu5Ac alpha2,6Gal/GalNAc and O-linked oligosaccharides with WGA-positive GlcNAc); 3. the sugar chains that are not in the earliest step of spermatogenesis (formed by both N-linked and O-linked oligosaccharides with Glc); and 4. other that appear at the earliest and latest stages, but not in the intermediate ones, (N-linked oligosaccharides with Man and O-linked oligosaccharides with SBA- and HPA-positive GalNAc and PNA-positive Gal beta1,3GalNAc). This structure could be related with the Drosophila spectrosome and fusome, unusual cytoplasmic organelles implicated in cystic germ cell development. Data from the present work, as compared with those from mammals and other vertebrates, suggest that, although no dramatic changes in the glycosylation pattern are observed, some cell glycoconjugates are modified in a predetermined way during the early steps of the spermatogenetic differentiation process.  相似文献   

14.
The addition of sialic acid to T cell surface glycoproteins influences essential T cell functions such as selection in the thymus and homing in the peripheral circulation. Sialylation of glycoproteins can be regulated by expression of specific sialyltransferases that transfer sialic acid in a specific linkage to defined saccharide acceptor substrates and by expression of particular glycoproteins bearing saccharide acceptors preferentially recognized by different sialyltransferases. Addition of alpha2,6-linked sialic acid to the Galbeta1,4GlcNAc sequence, the preferred ligand for galectin-1, inhibits recognition of this saccharide ligand by galectin-1. SAalpha2,6Gal sequences, created by the ST6Gal I enzyme, are present on medullary thymocytes resistant to galectin-1-induced death but not on galectin-1-susceptible cortical thymocytes. To determine whether addition of alpha2,6-linked sialic acid to lactosamine sequences on T cell glycoproteins inhibits galectin-1 death, we expressed the ST6Gal I enzyme in a galectin-1-sensitive murine T cell line. ST6Gal I expression reduced galectin-1 binding to the cells and reduced susceptibility of the cells to galectin-1-induced cell death. Because the ST6Gal I preferentially utilizes N-glycans as acceptor substrates, we determined that N-glycans are essential for galectin-1-induced T cell death. Expression of the ST6Gal I specifically resulted in increased sialylation of N-glycans on CD45, a receptor tyrosine phosphatase that is a T cell receptor for galectin-1. ST6Gal I expression abrogated the reduction in CD45 tyrosine phosphatase activity that results from galectin-1 binding. Sialylation of CD45 by the ST6Gal I also prevented galectin-1-induced clustering of CD45 on the T cell surface, an initial step in galectin-1 cell death. Thus, regulation of glycoprotein sialylation may control susceptibility to cell death at specific points during T cell development and peripheral activation.  相似文献   

15.
KCNQ1/KCNE1 channels are responsible for the Jervell-Lange-Nielsen cardiac syndrome, which is also characterized by congenital deafness. KCNQ1/KCNE1 is crucial for K+ transport in the inner ear. We show that KCNQ1 and KCNE1 are associated in testis and that their expression is closely regulated during development. Both genes were expressed in undifferentiated germ cells in 21-day-old rats and mostly confined to basal immature germ cells in adulthood. Leydig and Sertoli cells were negative. KCNQ1 and KCNE1 were also studied in various germ-cell pathologies. First, in spontaneous unilateral rat testis atrophy, hematoxylin-eosin analysis revealed massive germ-cell aplasia with only Sertoli cells and groups of interstitial Leydig cells. In these samples, KCNQ1 and KCNE1 were not expressed. In human seminoma samples characterized by a proliferation of undifferentiated germ cells, KCNQ1/KCNE1 protein levels were higher than in healthy samples. Our results demonstrate that the expression of KCNQ1 and KCNE1 is associated with early stages of spermatogenesis and with the presence of undifferentiated healthy or neoplastic germ cells. The presence of a K+ rich-fluid in the seminiferous tubule suggests that KCNQ1/KCNE1 is involved in K+ transport, probably during germ-cell development.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Germ cells produce sperm and eggs for reproduction and fertility. The Asian seabass (Lates calcarifer), a protandrous marine fish, undergoes male-female sex reversal and thus offers an excellent model to study the role of germ cells in sex differentiation and sex reversal. Here we report the cloning and expression of vasa as a first germ cell marker in this organism. A 2241-bp cDNA was cloned by PCR using degenerate primers of conserved sequences and gene-specific primers. This cDNA contains a polyadenylation signal and a full open reading frame for 645 amino acid residues, which was designated as Lcvasa for the seabass vasa, as its predicted protein is homologous to Vasa proteins. The Lcvasa RNA is maternally supplied and specific to gonads in adulthood. By chromogenic and fluorescent in situ hybridization we revealed germ cell-specific Lcvasa expression in both the testis and ovary. Importantly, Lcvasa shows dynamic patterns of temporospatial expression and subcellular distribution during gametogenesis. At different stages of oogenesis, for example, Lcvasa undergoes nuclear-cytoplasmic redistribution and becomes concentrated preferentially in the Balbiani body of stage-II~III oocytes. Thus, the vasa RNA identifies both female and male germ cells in the Asian seabass, and its expression and distribution delineate critical stages of gametogenesis.  相似文献   

18.
To investigate the factors regulating the biosynthesis of poly-N-acetyllactosamine chains containing the repeating disaccharide [3Gal beta 1,4GlcNAc beta 1] in animal cell glycoproteins, we have examined the structures and terminal sequences of these chains in the complex-type asparagine-linked oligosaccharides from the mouse lymphoma cell line BW5147. Cells were grown in medium containing [6-3H]galactose, and radiolabeled glycopeptides were prepared and fractionated by serial lectin affinity chromatography. The glycopeptides containing the poly-N-acetyllactosamine chains in these cells were complex-type tri- and tetraantennary asparagine-linked oligosaccharides. The poly-N-acetyllactosamine chains in these glycopeptides had four different terminal sequences with the structures: I, Gal beta 1,4GlcNAc beta 1,3Gal-R; II, Gal alpha 1,3Gal beta 1,4GlcNac beta 1,3Gal-R; III, Sia alpha 2,3Gal beta 1,4GlcNAc beta 1,3Gal-R; and IV, Sia alpha 2,6Gal beta 1,4GlcNAc beta 1,3Gal-R. We have found that immobilized tomato lectin interacts with high affinity with glycopeptides containing three or more linear units of the repeating disaccharide [3Gal beta 1,4GlcNAc beta 1] and thereby allows for a separation of glycopeptides on the basis of the length of the chain. A high percentage of the long poly-N-acetyllactosamine chains bound by immobilized tomato lectin were not sialylated and contained the simple terminal sequence of Structure I. In addition, a high percentage of the sialic acid residues that were present in the long chains were linked alpha 2,3 to penultimate galactose residues (Structure III). In contrast, a high percentage of the shorter poly-N-acetyllactosamine chains not bound by the immobilized lectin were sialylated, and most of the sialic acid residues in these chains were linked alpha 2,6 to galactose (Structure IV). These results indicate that there is a relationship in these cells between poly-N-acetyllactosamine chain length and the degree and type of sialylation of these chains.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Peanut lectin (PNA) or N-acetylgalactosamine (galNA, a part of the disaccharide unit which is recognized by PNA) was injected into the coelomic cavity of anuran larvae at the developmental stages during which the genital ridges were growing, and the effect of these compounds on the initial determination of gonadal sex was examined. The treatment with PNA tended to inhibit (or perturb) the expression of feminizing gene(s) in Rana japonica, and of both feminizing and masculinizing genes in R. nigromaculata. In contrast, treatment with galNA suppressed the expression of masculinizing gene(s) considerably. In terms of the initial determination of gonadal sex during normal development, these results suggest that the PNA-affinity molecule (PLAM) of primordial germ cells acts as a trigger for the expression of genes that control sexual differentiation of somatic cells. Furthermore, the somatic cells (perhaps mesenchymal and/or epithelial cells), which respond to the stimulus via the PLAM of primordial germ cells, may differ in terms of the threshold for such a response between genetic males and females. This result suggests the mesenchymal and/or epithelial cells are not sexually predetermined, but rather that sexual determination follows the response to some signal(s) mediated by the PLAM.  相似文献   

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