首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 113 毫秒
1.
Two species of Propionibacterium were analysed regarding their binding to glycosphingolipids. Bacteria were labeled with 125I and selective interaction with glycolipids on thin-layer chromatograms was revealed by autoradiography. The carbohydrate site in common for active molecular species appeared to be lactose. The two bacteria differed, however, in the overall binding pattern on the chromatogram, probably due to recognition of separate epitopes on lactose. P. freudenreichii bound only to lactosylceramide while P. granulosum also recognized substituted lactosylceramide: Gal alpha 1----3Gal beta 1----4Glc beta Cer, GlcNAc beta 1----3Gal beta 1----4Glc beta Cer and Gal beta 1----3GlcNAc beta 1----3Gal beta 1----4Glc beta Cer were active, but Gal-alpha 1----4Gal beta 1----4Glc beta Cer was inactive. Also, there was an interesting dependence on ceramide structure in the case of lactosylceramide. P. freudenreichii bound to lactosylceramide with sphingosine and non-hydroxy fatty acids but not to species with sphingosine and 2-hydroxy fatty acids, phytosphingosine and non-hydroxy fatty acids or phytosphingosine and 2-hydroxy fatty acids. For P. granulosum the situation was reversed. This may be explained by an influence of ceramide structure on the presentation of the two lactose epitopes at the assay surface. These results were supported by curves from the binding of labeled bacteria to glycolipids coated in microtiter wells and in part by binding to glycolipid-coated chicken erythrocytes.  相似文献   

2.
Neutral glycosphingolipids from sheep-derived Fasciola hepatica liver flukes were isolated and characterized both structurally and serologically. After HPLC fractionation, glycolipids were analyzed by linkage analysis, enzymatic cleavage, and MALDI-TOF as well as electrospray ionization mass spectrometry. Obtained results revealed the presence of two types of neutral glycolipids. The first group represented mammalian-type species comprising globo- and isoglobotriaosylceramides (Gal(alpha1-4)Gal(beta1-4)Glc(1-1)ceramide and Gal(alpha1-3)Gal(beta1-4)Glc(1-1)ceramide, respectively) as well as Forssman antigen (GalNAc(alpha1-3)GalNAc(beta1-3/4)Gal(alpha1-4/3)Gal(beta1-4)Glc(1-1)ceramide). Applying Helix pomatia agglutinin, recognizing terminal alpha-linked GalNAc, to cryosections of adult flukes, the latter glycolipid could be localized to the F. hepatica gut. As Forssman antigen from the parasite and sheep host led to identical MALDI-TOF MS profiles, this glycolipid might be acquired from the definitive host. As a second group, highly antigenic glycolipids were structurally characterized as Gal(beta1-6)Gal(beta1-4)Glc(1-1)ceramide, Gal(beta1-6)Gal(alpha1-3/4)Gal(beta1-4)Glc(1-1)ceramide and Gal(beta1-6)Gal(beta1-6)Gal(alpha1-3/4)Gal(beta1-4)Glc(1-1)ceramide, the latter two structures of which exhibited both isoglobo- or globo-series core structures. Terminal Gal(beta1-6)Gal1-motifs have previously been shown to represent antigenic epitopes of neogala-series glycosphingolipids from tape worms. Using human Echinococcus granulosus infection sera, Gal(beta1-6)Gal-terminating glycolipids could be allocated to the gut in adult liver fluke cryosections. Corresponding neogala-reactive antibodies in F. hepatica infection serum were detected by their binding to E. granulosus and Taenia crassiceps neogala-glycosphingolipids. These antibodies might contribute to the known serological cross-reactivity between F. hepatica and parasitic cestode infections.  相似文献   

3.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa infection in the lungs is a leading cause of death of patients with cystic fibrosis, yet a specific receptor that mediates adhesion of the bacteria to host tissue has not been identified. To examine the possible role of carbohydrates for bacterial adhesion, two species of Pseudomonas isolated from patients with cystic fibrosis were studied for binding to glycolipids. P. aeruginosa and P. cepacia labeled with 125I were layered on thin-layer chromatograms of separated glycolipids and bound bacteria were detected by autoradiography. Both isolates bound specifically to asialo GM1 (Gal beta 1-3GalNAc beta 1-4Gal beta 1-4Glc beta 1-1Cer) and asialo GM2 (GalNAc beta 1-4Gal beta 1-4Glc beta 1-1Cer) but not to lactosylceramide (Gal beta 1-4Glc beta 1-1Cer), globoside (GalNAc beta 1-3Gal alpha 1-4Gal beta 1-4Glc beta 1-1Cer), paragloboside (Gal beta 1-4GlcNAc beta 1-3Gal beta 1-4Glc beta 1-1Cer), or several other glycolipids that were tested. Asialo GM1 and asialo GM2 bound the bacteria equally well, exhibiting similar binding curves in solid-phase binding assays with a detection limit of 200 ng of either glycolipid. Both isolates also did not bind to GM1, GM2, or GDla suggesting that substitution of the glycolipids with sialosyl residues prevents binding. As the Pseudomonas do not bind to lactosylceramide, the beta-N-acetylgalactosamine residue, positioned internally in asialo GM1 and terminally in asialo GM2, is probably required for binding. beta-N-Acetylgalactosamine itself, however, is not sufficient as the bacteria do not bind to globoside or to the Forssman glycolipid. These data suggest that P. aeruginosa and P. cepacia recognize at least terminal or internal GalNAc beta 1-4Gal sequences in glycolipids which may be receptors for these pathogenic bacteria.  相似文献   

4.
Proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy has been reevaluated concerning the assignment of anomeric structure of glycosphingolipids. Solubility problems due to a varying number of sugars are avoided by permethylation, allowing a wide range of glycolipids to be compared. High resolution spectra were recorded in chloroform solution for the following substances with known structure, most of them representing a successive building up of members of the globo-series: ceramide, Galβ1 → 1Cer, a mixture of Glcα1 → 1Cer and Glcβ1 → 1Cer, lactosylceramide, globotriaosylceramide, globotetraosylceramide (globoside), and GalNAcα1 → 3globotetraosylceramide (Forssman hapten). Resonances originating in anomeric protons were identified and possible interference from other signals was defined. A complex set of resonances from H-1 of hexosamines was probably due to two separate conformers of the acetamido group caused by N-methylation. The complexity disappeared upon reduction with LiAlH4. The chemical shifts and coupling constants were characteristic for the configuration of the glycosidic bond, the type of monomer, and in part for its location in the chain. At present, spectra may be recorded from 200-μg samples. It is concluded that the good quality and resolution obtained make this technique an alternative method to the presently used enzymatic degradation for establishing anomeric structure of glycosphingolipids.  相似文献   

5.
Antiserum against Man beta 1-4Glc beta 1-1Ceramide (MIOse2Cer), a mannolipid isolated from spermatozoa of the fresh-water bivalve, Hyriopsis schlegellii, has been elicited in rabbits by repeated injection of a mixture of hapten-bovine serum albumin (1:1, mg/ml) with Freund's adjuvant. The specificity of the affinity-purified antibody (immunoglobulin G type) obtained from the serum was examined, using other glycosphingolipids and glyco-proteins structurally related to MIOse2Cer, by means of ELISA and TLC-immunostaining. The purified antibody was highly specific to MIOse2Cer and lacked reactivity with other glycolipids and glycoproteins including glucosylceramide, lactosylceramide, dimannosylglucosylceramide (MIOse3Cer), glucosaminylmannosylglucosylceramide (ArOse3Cer), thyroglobulin and alpha 1-acid glycoprotein. The antibody was found to bind, although less efficiently, to certain other compounds containing the group Man beta 1-4Glc and/or Man beta 1-4GlcNAc at their termini, such as MIOse2-sphingosine and Man beta 1-4GlcNAc beta 1-p-aminobenzoic acid ethylester derivatives. The present antibody was applied to the detection of the natural hapten in crustacean glycolipids. The purified antibody reacted with a neutral glycosphingolipid present in the two kinds of crustacean, Euphausia superba (antarctic krill) and Macrobrachium nipponense (fresh-water shrimp) as shown by TLC-immunostaining. The crustacean glycolipid antigen was isolated and characterized to be the Man beta 1-4Glc-Cer. This is the first report on the presence of a mannose-containing glycosphingolipid in the crustacean.  相似文献   

6.
Neutral glycolipids in PC12 cells were examined. A major neutral glycosphingolipid, isolated from a chloroform/methanol extract of the cells, was found to contain only galactose and glucose at a ratio of 3:1 and identified as ceramide tetrahexoside by fast atom bombardment (FAB) mass spectrometry. Its saccharide sequence was determined by a new method developed here using endoglycoceramidase (Ito, M., and Yamagata, T. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 14278-14282). The glycosphingolipid was digested with endoglycoceramidase to produce oligosaccharide which was subsequently pyridylaminated. The fluorescence-labeled oligosaccharide was digested with a series of specific exoglycosidases and fractionated by high performance liquid chromatography. The 2-aminopyridyl oligosaccharide was hydrolyzed by alpha-galactosidase to give a 2-aminopyridyl oligosaccharide which was identified as 2-aminopyridyl lactose by high performance liquid chromatography, indicating the glycolipid structure to be Gal alpha Gal alpha Gal beta GlcCer. Ceramide trihexoside obtained by limited digestion of the intact glycolipid was clearly identical with ceramide trihexoside obtained from human erythrocytes, according to NMR spectroscopy and methylation analysis. From these and other data on the intact glycolipid, obtained by methylation analysis and NMR spectroscopy, its structure was confirmed as Gal alpha 1-3Gal alpha 1-4Gal beta 1-4Glc beta 1-1Cer, III3-Gal alpha-globotriaosylceramide. This is the first report indicating the presence of this glycosphingolipid in PC12 cells.  相似文献   

7.
Major neutral glycosphingolipids were isolated from human plasma and their structures and fatty acid compositions studied. The four neutral glycosphingolipids of plasma were characterized as Glc beta(1 leads to 1)ceramide, Gal beta(1 leads to 1)- ceramide, Gal beta(1 leads to 4) Glc beta (1 leads to 1)ceramide, Gal alpha(1 leads to 4) Gal beta(1 leads to 4) Glc beta(1 leads to 1)ceramide and GalNAc beta(1 leads to 3) Gal (1 leads to 4) Gal (1 leads to 4) Glc beta(1 leads to 1)-ceramide. The glycosphingolipids contained mostly short chain fatty acids of which most prominent was C16. Erythrocyte glucosylceramide and lactosylceramide exhibited similar fatty acid compositions as their plasma counterparts. Triglycosylceramide and globoside of erythrocytes contained almost exclusively long-chain fatty acids. In lactosylceramide obtained from "p" erythrocytes, an accumulation of long-chain fatty acids was found; this accumulation was not observed, however, in lactosylceramide isolated from "p" plasma. It was concluded that plasma and erythrocyte glycosphingolipids are synthesized at separate sites where short- and long-chain fatty acids, respectively, are available. Plasma and erythrocyte glucosylceramide, and probably a fraction of lactosylceramide, exchange between plasma and erythrocyte pools. The latter conclusion is discussed in the light of the relative roles of carbohydrate and lipid moieties of the glycosphingolipids in maintaining their association with erythrocyte membranes.  相似文献   

8.
Eight different fractions containing glycolipids with 1 to 8 hexoses in a linear sequence were isolated from rat small intestine. The structure of the major components was established by mass spectrometry and proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy of the permethylated and permethylated-reduced (LiAlH4) derivatives and by gas-liquid chromatography of degradation products of the native and permethylated or permethylated-reduced glycolipids. The major compounds were glucosylceramide, lactosylceramide, globotriaosylceramide, and a novel tetrahexosylceramide with the structure Gal α 1 → 3Galα1 → 4Galβ1 → 4Glcβ1 → 1Cer. In addition four minor compounds having five to eight hexoses were identified with the probable structures Galα1 → 3Galα1 → 3Galα1 → 4Galβ1 → 4Glcβ1 → 1Cer, Galα1 → 3Galα1 → 3Galα1 → 3Galα1 → 4Galβ1 → 4Glcβ1 → 1Cer, Gal1 → 3Gal1 → 3Gal1 → 3Gal1 → 3Gal1 → 4Gal1 → 4Glc1 → 1Cer, and Gal1 → 3Gal1 → 3Gal1 → 3Gal1 → 3Gal1 → 3Gal1 → 4Gal1 → 4Glc1 → 1Cer. In the pentahexosylceramide fraction a novel fucolipid was also present having the probable structure Fucα1 → 2Galα1 → 3Galα1 → 4Galβ1 → 4Galβ1 → 1Cer. The lipophilic part of the glycolipids was composed of trihydroxy 18:0 and dihydroxy 18:1 long-chain bases in combination with nonhydroxy and hydroxy 16:0–24:0 fatty acids. Glycolipid studies of isolated mucosal epithelial cells and the nonepithelial intestinal residue revealed a specific cell distribution of these hexosyl compounds. The two major components, glucosylceramide and globotriaosylceramide, were mainly located in the epithelial cells together with small amounts of lactosylceramide and tetrahexosylceramide. The epithelial cells practically lacked however the penta- to octahexosylceramides. The nonepithelial residue contained all hexosyl compounds. The fucolipid was exclusively present in the epithelial cells.  相似文献   

9.
The physiological degradation of several membrane-bound glycosphingolipids (GSLs) by water-soluble lysosomal exohydrolases requires the assistance of sphingolipid activator proteins (SAPs). Four of these SAPs are synthesized from a single precursor protein (prosaposin). Inherited deficiency of this precursor results in a rare disease in humans with an accumulation of ceramide (Cer) and glycolipids such as glucosylceramide and lactosylceramide (LacCer). In a previous study, we have shown that human SAP-D stimulates the lysosomal degradation of Cer in precursor deficient cells. In order to study the role of SAPs (or saposins) A-D in cellular GSL catabolism, we recently investigated the catabolism of exogenously added [(3)H]labeled ganglioside GM1, Forssman lipid, and endogenously [(14)C]labeled GSLs in SAP-precursor deficient human fibroblasts after the addition of recombinant SAP-A, -B, -C and -D. We found that activator protein deficient cells are still able to slowly degrade gangliosides GM1 and GM3, Forssman lipid and globotriaosylceramide to a significant extent, while LacCer catabolism critically depends on the presence of SAPs. The addition of either of the SAPs, SAP-A, SAP-B or SAP-C, resulted in an efficient hydrolysis of LacCer.  相似文献   

10.
The presence of glycosphingolipids in the pupae of the blowfly, Calliphora vicina, was established. The thin layer chromatographic pattern of the total neutral glycolipids revealed the presence of more than 13 components, the major one being ceramide monohexoside. By the use of high performance liquid chromatography, the three simplest components were isolated and their chemical structures determined: Glc(beta 1-1)Cer, Man(beta 1-4)-Glc(beta 1-1)Cer [with minor component Gal(beta 1-4)Glc(beta 1-1)Cer] and GlcNAc(beta 1-3)Man(beta 1-4)Glc(beta 1-1)-Cer. The ceramide composition of the parent insect glycosphingolipids is dominated by the 20:0 fatty acid, arachidic acid, and the sphingoid tetradecasphing-4-enine.  相似文献   

11.
T Ariga  K Yoshida  K Nemoto  M Seki  N Miyatani  R K Yu 《Biochemistry》1991,30(32):7953-7961
We have studied the glycolipid composition of six different murine myelogenous leukemias as well as that of T-cell leukemias and normal spleen cells. Neutral and acidic lipid fractions were isolated by column chromatography on DEAE-Sephadex and analyzed by high-performance thin-layer chromatography (HPTLC) and an HPTLC overlay method. Murine myelogenous leukemias were found to contain globo- and ganglio-series neutral glycolipids, e.g., glucosylceramide (Glc-cer), lactosylceramide (Lac-cer), globotriaosylceramide (Gb3), globoside (Gb4), Forssman glycolipid (Gb5), and asialo-GM1 (GA1). Monoblastic leukemia cells contained increased proportions of Gb3, Gb4, Gb5, and GA1. Monocytic and myelomonocytic leukemia cells contained increased proportions of Glc-cer and Lac-cer. Especially, Glc-cer accounted for approximately 60% of the total neutral glycolipids in monocytic leukemia cells. Gb3 was the major neutral glycolipid in reticulum cell neoplasm type A, and it accounted for approximately 75% of the neutral glycolipids. GA1 was the major neutral glycolipid in myeloblastic and granulocytic leukemia cells as well as T-cell leukemias. Especially, granulocytic leukemia cells contained predominantly GA1, and it accounted for approximately 80% of the total neutral glycolipids. The pattern of gangliosides in myelogenous leukemias was more complex when compared with that of the neutral glycolipids; murine myelogenous leukemias contained at least 13 gangliosides, including such major gangliosides as GM1, GM1b containing N-acetyl neuraminic acid and N-glycolyl neuraminic acid, and Ga1NAc-GM1b. Alterations of glycolipid composition in murine myeloid leukemias may be associated with cellular differentiation and maturation, and therefore these characteristic glycolipid species may be regarded as markers for specific populations of leukemia cells.  相似文献   

12.
Glycosphingolipids were isolated from a canine kidney cell line (MDCK) and its ouabain-resistant mutant (MDCK-OR) by solvent extraction, mild alkaline methanolysis, a DEAE-Sephadex column, and preparative TLC. The glycolipids were characterized by their mobilities on TLC, an analysis of carbohydrates as trimethylsilyl methyl glycosides and acetates of partially methylated alditols, as well as by treatment with specific glycosidases. In the neutral glycolipid fraction of both cell lines, galactosylceramide (GalCer), glucosylceramide (GlcCer), lactosylceramide (LacCer), digalactosylceramide (Ga2Cer), globotriaosylceramide (Gb3Cer), globoside (Gb4Cer), and the Forssman antigen (IV3GalNAc alpha-Gb4Cer) were identified. The contents of Ga2Cer (4.4 nmol/mg protein), Gb3Cer (0.6), Gb4Cer (2.9), and IV3GalNac alpha-Gb4Cer (19.5) in MDCK-OR were 1.4- to 2.1-fold higher than those in MDCK, while the concentrations of GlcCer (5.3) and LacCer (1.4) in MDCK-OR were about half of those in MDCK. Among acidic glycolipids of MDCK-OR, galactosyl sulfatide (GalCer-I3-sulfate) and lactosyl sulfatide (LacCer-II3-sulfate) were increased to 1.9 (2.7-fold) and 0.2 nmol/mg protein (2.0-fold), respectively, as compared to MDCK. However, N-acetylneuraminosyllactosylceramide (GM3), the predominant ganglioside in both cell lines, was decreased to about one third of the level (1.5 nmol/mg protein) in the parent MDCK (4.7 nmol/mg protein). The fatty acid of the glycolipids in both cell lines consisted mainly of saturated acids of 16, 18, 22, and 24 carbons.  相似文献   

13.
Previous studies have shown that the glycoprotein oligosaccharides synthesized by adult Schistosoma mansoni, the organism responsible for human schistosomiasis, are unusual in that they contain terminal beta-GalNAc residues and lack sialic acid. These observations and other studies indicating that schistosome glycoproteins and glycolipids are antigenic in infected animals led us to investigate the structures of the glycosphingolipids synthesized by these organisms and to determine whether they are structurally related to those synthesized by their vertebrate hosts. For our studies, adult schistosomes were metabolically radiolabeled with either [3H]galactose or [3H]glucosamine, and the newly synthesized glycosphingolipids were isolated and characterized. The major glycosphingolipids synthesized by adult schistosomes were found to be galactosylceramide and glucosylceramide. The adult worms synthesized no lactosylceramide (Gal beta 1-4Glc-ceramide), a common constituent of vertebrate cells; however, another disaccharide-containing glycosphingolipid cleavable by ceramide glycanase was found. The results of compositional and methylation analyses and exoglycosidase treatments demonstrated that this ceramide-disaccharide has the structure GalNAc beta 1-4Glc-ceramide. We also found that extracts of adult schistosomes are unable to transfer Gal from UDP-Gal to glucosylceramide, whereas extracts of Chinese hamster ovary cells, as a control, are able to do so, confirming that schistosomes are unable to synthesize lactosylceramide. Low levels of higher molecular weight glycosphingolipids were also found to be synthesized by adult schistosomes, and although their levels were too small to allow definitive characterization, compositional analyses indicated that they also contained GalNAc. We have tentatively designated the new disaccharide structure GalNAc beta 1, 4Glc- the "schistocore", which may represent a new type of glycosphingolipid core series.  相似文献   

14.
Neutral glycosphingolipids of murine T-lymphoma EL-4 were studied. The major glycolipid components were identified as GlcCer, LacCer, GgOse3Cer and GgOse4Cer. It has been shown for the first time that not only gangliosides but also neutral glycolipids are shed from the cell surface into the outer medium.  相似文献   

15.
Oxidation of glycolipids in liposomes by galactose oxidase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Small unilamellar phosphatidylcholine vesicles containing globo-series glycolipids were labeled by the galactose oxidase/NaB[3H]4 procedure. The major glycolipid of human red cells, globoside, was the best substrate for galactose oxidase both in vesicles and in tetrahydrofuran-containing buffer. The oxidation rates of membrane-bound ceramide trihexoside and Forssman glycolipid were one-fourth and one-tenth, respectively, of the oxidation rate of globoside. Membrane-bound ceramide dihexoside was not a substrate for galactose oxidase, although it was readily oxidized in tetrahydrofuran-containing buffer. Soluble sialoglycoproteins and membrane-incorporated glycophorin A stimulated the oxidation of globoside-containing vesicles, whereas membrane-bound GD1a ganglioside had no effect on globoside oxidation.  相似文献   

16.
The exposure of glycolipids in Pk and p red cells was studied by the galactose oxidase/ NaB2H4 and galactose oxidase/NaB3H4 surface labeling techniques. The major glycolipid in Pk cells, ceramide trihexoside was efficiently labeled when high amounts of galactose oxidase were used. In contrast, the major glycolipid in p cells, ceramide dihexoside was not oxidized by galactose oxidase. However, minor components with longer oligosaccharide chains were readily labeled in p cells by the galactose oxidase/NaB3H4 method.Abbreviations CDH ceramide dihexoside, LacCer - CTH ceramide trihexoside, GbOse3Cer  相似文献   

17.
Skin fibroblast cultures from patients with inherited lysosomal enzymopathies, alpha-N-acetylgalactosaminidase (alpha-NAGA) and alpha-galactosidase A deficiencies (Schindler and Fabry disease, respectively), and from normal controls were used to study in situ degradation of blood group A and B glycosphingolipids. Glycosphingolipids A-6-2 (GalNAc (alpha 1-->3)[Fuc alpha 1-->2]Gal(beta1-->4)GlcNAc(beta 1-->3)Gal(beta 1--> 4)Glc (beta 1-->1')Cer, IV(2)-alpha-fucosyl-IV(3)-alpha-N-acetylgalactosaminylneolactotetraosylceramide), B-6-2 (Gal(alpha 1-->3)[Fuc alpha 1--> 2] Gal (beta 1-->4)GlcNAc(beta 1-->3)Gal(beta 1-->4)Glc(beta 1-->1')Cer, IV(2)- alpha-fucosyl-IV(3)-alpha-galactosylneolactotetraosylceramide), and globoside (GalNAc(beta 1-->3)Gal(alpha 1-->4)Gal(beta 1-->4)Glc(beta 1-->1') Cer, globotetraosylceramide) were tritium labeled in their ceramide moiety and used as natural substrates. The degradation rate of glycolipid A-6-2 was very low in fibroblasts of all the alpha-NAGA-deficient patients (less than 7% of controls), despite very heterogeneous clinical pictures, ruling out different residual enzyme activities as an explanation for the clinical heterogeneity. Strongly elevated urinary excretion of blood group A glycolipids was detected in one patient with blood group A, secretor status (five times higher than upper limit of controls), in support of the notion that blood group A-active glycolipids may contribute as storage compounds in blood group A patients. When glycolipid B-6-2 was fed to alpha-galactosidase A-deficient cells, the degradation rate was surprisingly high (50% of controls), while that of globotriaosylceramide was reduced to less than 15% of control average, presumably reflecting differences in the lysosomal enzymology of polar glycolipids versus less-polar ones. Relatively high-degree degradation of substrates with alpha-D-Galactosyl moieties hints at a possible contribution of other enzymes.  相似文献   

18.
A useful method for N-deacylation of the ceramide moiety of glycosphingolipids has been developed. Galactosylceramide, glucosylceramide, lactosylceramide, and galactosyllactosylceramide were effectively deacylated by heating with anhydrous hydrazine at 150 degrees C for 15-25 h. The lyso-derivative as the deacylated product of the ceramide moiety of each glycosphingolipid was isolated by preparative silica gel thin layer chromatography with a 70-85% yield from the starting glycolipids. Hydrazine sulfate was an effective catalyst for the deacylation of the ceramide moiety. No dissociation of oligosaccharide moieties of the glycolipids on hydrazinolysis was confirmed by gas chromatographic analysis and N-acylation of these lysoderivatives. The free amino groups of the lysoglycosphingolipids can be combined with various kinds of probes giving useful derivatives for biochemical and immunological studies on glycosphingolipids.  相似文献   

19.
We have developed a high-performance liquid chromatographic (HPLC) procedure for separation of O-acetyl-N-p-nitrobenzoyl derivatives of six neutral glycosphingolipids: glucosylceramide, lactosylceramide, globotriaosylceramide, lactotriaosylceramide, globotetraosylceramide, and neolactotetraosylceramide. The recoveries of glucosylceramide and globotetraosylceramide for the derivatization procedure and HPLC analysis were approximately 75%, and one nanomole of glycolipid could be detected. The procedure was used for analysis of human erythrocyte neutral glycolipids.  相似文献   

20.
Abstract: The influence of divalent cations on glycosphingolipid metabolism was examined in the NB41A mouse neuroblastoma clonal cell line. HPLC methods were utilized to quantitate the effects on neutral glycolipids and monosialogangliosides. NB41A cells were shown to contain GM3, GM2, GM1, GD3, and GD1a by HPLC and TLC. The neutral glycosphingolipids consisted of glucosylceramide (GlcCer), lactosylceramide (LacCer), GaINAc(β1→4) Gal(β1→4)Glc(β1→1)Cer (GgOse3Cer), and GaINAc(β1→3)Gal(α1→4) Gal-(β1→4)Glc(β1→1)Cer (GbOse3Cer) according to their HPLC behavior. Cells grown in the presence of 1.85 mm -EGTA showed a two- to threefold increase in GM3 whereas other glycosphingolipids were only slightly affected. When cells were grown in the presence of 1.45 mm -EGTA plus 0.4 mm -EDTA a similar increase in GM3 was observed but this change was now accompanied by decreases in GM2, GM1 GgOse3Cer, and GbOse4Cer. The EGTA-EDTA effects were reversed when growth was in the presence of Ca2+ sufficient to bind all chelator. Mn2+ replacement reversed the chelator effects differentially; GM2 and GM1 levels were the most sensitive to increases in Mn2+ concentration; GgOse3Cer and GbOse4Cer were also sensitive, whereas GM3 was the least affected. These results suggest calcium serves an important regulatory role on GM3 levels and that manganese concentration may regulate the levels of galactosamine-containing glycolipids in mouse NB41A neuroblastoma cells.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号