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1.
Based on our preliminary observation of abnormal glycosylation in a cutis laxa patient, nine cutis laxa patients were analyzed for congenital defects of glycosylation (CDG). Isoelectric focusing of plasma transferrin and apolipoproteinC-III showed that three out of nine patients had a defect in the biosynthesis of N-glycans and core 1 mucin type O-glycans, respectively. Mass spectrometric N-glycan analyses revealed a relative increase of glycans lacking sialic acid and glycans lacking sialic acid and galactose residues. Mutation analysis of the fibulin-5 gene (FBLN5), which has been reported in cases of autosomal recessive cutis laxa, revealed no mutations in the patients' DNA. Evidence is presented that extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins of skin are likely to be highly glycosylated with N- and/or mucin type O-glycans by using algorithms for predicting glycosylation. The conclusions in this study were that the clinical phenotype of autosomal recessive cutis laxa seen in three patients is not caused by mutations in the FBLN5 gene. Our findings define a novel form of CDG with cutis laxa and neurological involvement due to a defect in the sialylation and/or galactosylation of N- and O-glycans. Improper glycosylation of ECM proteins of skin may form the pathophysiological basis for the cutis laxa phenotype.  相似文献   

2.
Porcine aortic endothelial cells (PAECs) produce glycoproteins with important biological functions, such as the control of cell adhesion, blood clotting, blood pressure, the immune system, and apoptosis. Cell surface glycoproteins play important roles in these biological activities. To understand the control of cell surface glycosylation, we elucidated biosynthetic pathways leading to N- and O-glycans in PAECs. Based on the enzyme activities, PAECs should be rich in complex biantennary N-glycans. In addition, the enzymes synthesizing complex O-glycans with core 1 and 2 structures are present in PAECs. The first enzyme of the O-glycosylation pathway, polypeptide GalNAc-transferase, was particularly active. Its specificity toward synthetic peptide substrates was found to be similar to that of purified bovine colostrum enzyme T1. A significant fraction of PAECs treated with tumour necrosis factor alpha or human serum detached from the culture plate, and most of these cells were apoptotic. The apoptotic cell population exhibited decreased core 2 beta 6-GlcNAc-transferase activity. In contrast, the activities of core 1 beta 3-Gal-transferase, which synthesizes O-glycan core 1, and of alpha 3-sialyltransferase (O), which sialylates core 1, were increased in apoptotic PAECs. Thus, apoptotic PAECs are predicted to have fewer complex O-glycans and a higher proportion of short, sialylated core 1 chains.  相似文献   

3.
Joint destruction in arthritis is often associated with high levels of inflammatory cytokines. Previous work has shown that inflammatory conditions can alter the activities of glycosyltransferases that synthesize the glycan chains of glycoproteins, and that these changes in turn can influence the functions of glycoproteins. We therefore examined glycosyltransferases involved in glycoprotein biosynthesis in primary cultures of bovine articular chondrocytes and human chondrocytes isolated from knee cartilage of osteoarthritis patients. Bovine chondrocytes exhibited enzyme activities involved in the synthesis of bi-antennary complex Asn-linked N-glycans, as well as the enzymes involved in the synthesis of GalNAc-Ser/Thr-linked O-glycans with the core 1 structure. Human chondrocytes, in addition, were able to synthesize more complex O-glycans with core 2 structures. TNFalpha was found to induce apoptosis in chondrocytes, and this process was associated with significant changes in lectin binding to chondrocyte cell surface glycans. TGFbeta increased cell proliferation, and had significant effects on cell surface glycosylation in bovine but not in human cells. These cytokine-specific effects were partially correlated with changes in glycosyltransferase activities. Thus, chondrocytes have many of the enzymes necessary for the synthesis of N- and O-glycan chains of glycoproteins. The O-glycosylation pathways and the effects of TNFalpha and TGFbeta on glycosylation differed between bovine and human chondrocytes. These alterations are of potential importance for the regulation of the functions of cell surface receptors on chondrocytes, and for an understanding of the pathophysiology of arthritis.  相似文献   

4.
The parasitic helminth Schistosoma mansoni is a major public health concern in many developing countries. Glycoconjugates, and in particular the carbohydrate component of these products, represent the main immunogenic challenge to the host and could therefore represent one of the crucial determinants for successful parasite establishment. Here we report a comparative glycomics analysis of the N- and O-glycans derived from glycoproteins present in S. mansoni egg (egg-secreted protein) and cercarial (0-3-h released protein) secretions by a combination of mass spectrometric techniques. Our results show that S. mansoni secrete glycoproteins with glycosylation patterns that are complex and stage-specific. Cercarial stage secretions were dominated by N-glycans that were core-xylosylated, whereas N-glycans from egg secretions were predominantly core-difucosylated. O-Glycan core structures from cercarial secretions primarily consisted of the core sequence Galbeta1-->3(Galbeta1-->6)GalNAc, whereas egg-secreted O-glycans carried the mucin-type core 1 (Galbeta1-->3GalNAc) and 2 (Galbeta1-->3(GlcNAcbeta1-->6)GalNAc) structures. Additionally we identified a novel O-glycan core in both secretions in which a Gal residue is linked to the protein. Terminal structures of N- and O-glycans contained high levels of fucose and include stage-specific structures. These glycan structures identified in S. mansoni secretions are potentially antigenic motifs and ligands for carbohydrate-binding proteins of the host immune system.  相似文献   

5.
Congenital disorders of glycosylation (CDGs) are caused by defects in genes that participate in biosynthetic glycosylation pathways. To date, 19 different genetic defects in N-glycosylation, 17 in O-glycosylation, and 21 in multiple glycosylation are known. Current diagnostic testing of CDGs largely relies on indirect analysis of glycosylation of serum transferrin. Such analysis alone is insufficient to diagnose many of the known glycosylation disorders. To improve the diagnosis of these groups of CDGs, we have developed serum or plasma N- and O-glycan profiling using a combination of MALDI–TOF/MS and LC–MS/MS technologies. Using this approach, we analyzed samples from nine patients with different known multiple glycosylation disorders, including three with COG deficiencies, one with TMEM165-CDG, two with PGM1-CDG, and three with SLC35A2-CDG, and one patient with combined type I and type II of unknown molecular etiology. Measurement of the relative quantities of various N- and O-glycan species clearly differentiates patients and controls. Our study demonstrates that structural analysis and quantitation of combined N- and O-glycan profiles are reliable diagnostic tools for CDGs.  相似文献   

6.
Congenital disorders of glycosylation (CDG) are being recognized as a rapidly growing and complex group of disorders. The pathophysiology results from depressed synthesis or remodeling of oligosaccharide moieties of glycoproteins. The ultimate result is the formation of abnormal glycoproteins affecting their structure and metabolic functions. The most thoroughly studied subset of CDG are the type I defects affecting N-glycosylation. Causal mutations occur in at least 12 different genes which encode primarily monosaccharide transferases necessary for N-glycosylation in the endoplasmic reticulum. The broad clinical presentation of these glycosylation defects challenge clinicians to test for these defects in a variety of clinical settings. The first described CDG was a phosphomannomutase deficiency (CDG-Ia). The original method used to define the glycosylation defect was isoelectric focusing (IEF) of transferrin. More recently, the use of other charge separation methods and electrospray-mass spectrometry (ESI-MS) has proven valuable in detecting type I CDG defects. By mass resolution, the under-glycosylation of transferrin is characterized as the total absence of one or both N-linked oligosaccharide. Beyond providing a new understanding of the structure of transferrin in type I CDG patients, it is adaptable to high throughput serum analysis. The use of transferrin under-glycosylation to detect the type I CDG provides limited insight into the specific site of the defect in oligosaccharide assembly since its value is constrained to observation of the final product of glycoprotein synthesis. New analytical targets and tools are converging with the clinical need for diagnosis of CDG. Defining the biosynthetic sites responsible for specific CDG phenotypes is in progress, and ten more type I defects have been putatively identified. This review discusses current methods, such as IEF and targeted proteomics using mass spectrometry, that are used routinely to test for type I CDG disorders, along with some newer approaches to define the defective synthetic sites responsible for the type I CDG defects. All diagnostic endeavors are followed by the quest for a reliable treatment. The isolated success of CDG-Ib treatment will be described with the hope that this may expand to other type I CDG disorders.  相似文献   

7.
The fundamental importance of correct protein glycosylation is abundantly clear in a group of diseases known as congenital disorders of glycosylation (CDGs). In these diseases, many biological functions are compromised, giving rise to a wide range of severe clinical conditions. By performing detailed analyses of the total serum glycoproteins as well as isolated transferrin and IgG, we have directly correlated aberrant glycosylation with a faulty glycosylation processing step. In one patient the complete absence of complex type sugars was consistent with ablation of GlcNAcTase II activity. In another CDG type II patient, the identification of specific hybrid sugars suggested that the defective processing step was cell type-specific and involved the mannosidase III pathway. In each case, complementary serum proteome analyses revealed significant changes in some 31 glycoproteins, including components of the complement system. This biochemical approach to charting diseases that involve alterations in glycan processing provides a rapid indicator of the nature, severity, and cell type specificity of the suboptimal glycan processing steps; allows links to genetic mutations; indicates the expression levels of proteins; and gives insight into the pathways affected in the disease process.  相似文献   

8.
Protein glycosylation is one of the major biosynthetic functions occurring in the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi compartments. It requires an amazing number of enzymes, chaperones, lectins and transporters whose actions delicately secure the fidelity of glycan structures. Over the past 30 years, glycobiologists hammered that glycan structures are not mere decorative elements but serve crucial cellular functions. This becomes dramatically illustrated by a group of mostly severe, inherited human disorders named congenital disorders of glycosylation (CDG). To date, many types of CDG have been defined genetically and most of the time the defects impair the biosynthesis, transfer and remodeling of N-glycans. Recently, the identification of the several types of CDG caused by deficiencies in the conserved oligomeric Golgi (COG) complex, a complex involved in vesicular Golgi trafficking, expanded the field of CDG but also brought novel insights in glycosylation. The molecular mechanisms underlying the complex pathway of N-glycosylation in the Golgi are far from understood. The availability of COG-deficient CDG patients and patients' cells offered a new way to study how COG, and its different subunits, could influence the Golgi N-glycosylation machinery and localization. This review summarizes the recent findings on the implication of COG in Golgi glycosylation. It highlights the need for a dynamic, finely tuned balance between anterograde and retrograde trafficking for the correct localization of Golgi enzymes to assure the stepwise maturation of N-glycan chains.  相似文献   

9.
Synoviocytes are fibroblastic cells that line joint cavities. These cells synthesize numerous cell-surface and extracellular-matrix glycoproteins that are required for maintenance of the joint. Joint inflammation, such as occurs in arthritis, has been shown to have major effects on synoviocyte proliferation and on the biosynthesis of glycoproteins. The structures of the carbohydrate moieties of glycoproteins, however, and the enzymes involved in their synthesis have not yet been described for synoviocytes. Therefore, to characterize the cell-surface glycoconjugates, synoviocytes were isolated from bovine ankles, and the cells were grown in primary cultures. Lectin-binding assays were used to identify exposed N- and O-glycan carbohydrate determinants on synoviocytes, and specific enzyme assays were used to identify some of the glycosyltransferases involved in the synthesis of the glycan chains. A number of the enzymes that synthesize N- and O-linked oligosaccharides were found to be active in cell-free extracts of synoviocytes, including those that synthesize core-1-based O-glycans and the more complex bi-antennary N-glycans. To understand the molecular events underlying the inflammatory response in the synovium of arthritis patients, we examined the effect of the inflammatory cytokine tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) on synoviocytes and on glycosylation profiles. TNF-alpha treatment, which induces apoptosis in synoviocytes, was accompanied by changes in lectin-binding patterns, indicating alterations in the expression of cell-surface oligosaccharides. Concurrently, changes in specific enzyme activities were observed in treated cells. Two enzymes potentially important to the inflammatory process, core 2 beta6-GlcNAc-transferase and beta4-Gal-transferase, increased after TNF-alpha treatment. This is the first study of glycoprotein biosynthesis in synoviocytes, and it shows that synoviocytes have a characteristic glycosylation phenotype that is altered in the presence of inflammatory cytokines.  相似文献   

10.
Untreated classic galactosemia (galactose-1-phosphate uridyltransferase [GALT] deficiency) is known as a secondary congenital disorders of glycosylation (CDG) characterized by galactose deficiency of glycoproteins and glycolipids (processing defect or CDG-II). The mechanism of this undergalactosylation has not been established. Here we show that in untreated galactosemia, there is also a partial deficiency of whole glycans of serum transferrin associated with increased fucosylation and branching as seen in genetic glycosylation assembly defects (CDG-I). Thus galactosemia seems to be a secondary "dual" CDG causing a processing as well as an assembly N-glycosylation defect. We also demonstrated that in galactosemia patients, transferrin N-glycan biosynthesis is restored upon dietary treatment.  相似文献   

11.
Congenital disorder of glycosylation (CDG), formerly representing a group of diseases due to defects in the biosynthetic pathway of protein N-glycosylation, currently covers a wide range of disorders affecting glycoconjugates. Since its first application to serum transferrin from a CDG patient with phosphomannomutase-2 deficiency in 1992, mass spectrometry (MS) has been playing a key role in identification and characterization of glycosylation defects affecting glycoproteins. MS of native transferrin detects a lack of glycans characteristic to the classical CDG-I type of molecular abnormality. Electrospray ionization MS of native transferrin, especially, allows glycoforms to be analyzed precisely but requires basic knowledge regarding deconvolution of multiply-charged ions which may generate ghost signals upon transformation into a singly-charged form. MS of glycopeptides from tryptic digestion of transferrin delineates site-specific glycoforms and reveals a delicate balance of donor/acceptor substrates or the conformational effect of nascent proteins in cells. Matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization MS of apolipoprotein C-III is a simple method of elucidating the profiles of mucin-type core 1 O-glycans including site occupancy and glycoforms. In this technological review, the principle and pitfalls of MS for CDG are discussed and mass spectra of various types of CDG are presented.  相似文献   

12.
The N- and O-glycans of recombinant amyloid precursor protein (APP), purified from Chinese hamster ovary cells transfected with the human 695-amino acid form of APP, were separately released by hydrazinolysis under different conditions. The reducing ends of the released N- and O-glycans were reduced with NaB3H4 and derivatized with 2-aminobenzamide (2AB), respectively. After acidic N-glycans were obtained by anion-exchange column chromatography, these were converted to neutral oligosaccharides by sialidase digestion, demonstrating that their acidic nature was entirely due to sialylation. The sialidase-treated N-glycans were then fractionated by lectin column chromatography and their structures were determined by linkage-specific sequential exoglycosidase digestion. These results demonstrated that recombinant APP has bi- and triantennary complex type N-glycans with fucosylated and nonfucosylated trimannosyl cores. In a similar fashion, the 2AB-labeled O-glycans derived from APP were determined to be mono- and disialylated core type 1 structures. Taken together, these results indicate that recombinant APP has sialylated bi- and triantennary N-glycans with fucosylated and nonfucosylated cores and sialylated O-glycans with core type 1 structures.  相似文献   

13.
The congenital disorders of glycosylation (CDG) are characterized by defects in N-linked glycan biosynthesis that result from mutations in genes encoding proteins directly involved in the glycosylation pathway. Here we describe two siblings with a fatal form of CDG caused by a mutation in the gene encoding COG-7, a subunit of the conserved oligomeric Golgi (COG) complex. The mutation impairs integrity of the COG complex and alters Golgi trafficking, resulting in disruption of multiple glycosylation pathways. These cases represent a new type of CDG in which the molecular defect lies in a protein that affects the trafficking and function of the glycosylation machinery.  相似文献   

14.
Defects in the biosynthesis of N- and core 1 O-glycans may be found by isoelectric focusing (IEF) of plasma transferrin and apolipoprotein C-III (apoC-III). We hypothesized that IEF of transferrin and apoC-III in combination with sodium dodecyl sulphate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) of apoC-III may provide a classification for congenital disorders of glycosylation (CDG) patients. We analyzed plasma from 22 patients with eight different and well-characterized CDG subtypes and 19 cases with unsolved CDG. Transferrin IEF (TIEF) has been used to distinguish between N-glycan assembly (type 1 profile) and processing (type 2 profile) defects. We differentiated two different CDG type 2 TIEF profiles: The "asialo profile" characterized by elevated levels of asialo- and monosialotransferrin and the "disialo profile" characterized by increased levels of disialo- and trisialotransferrin. ApoC-III IEF gave two abnormal profiles ("apoC-III(0)" and "apoC-III(1)" profiles). The results for the eight established CDG forms exactly matched the theoretical expectations, providing a validation for the study approach. The combination of the three electrophoretic techniques was not additionally informative for the CDG-Ix patients as they had normal apoC-III IEF patterns. However, the CDG-IIx patients could be further subdivided into six biochemical subgroups. The robustness of the methodology was supported by the fact that three patients with similar clinical features ended in the same subgroup and that another patient, classified in the "CDG-IIe subgroup," turned out to have a similar defect. Dividing the CDG-IIx patients in six subgroups narrows down drastically the options of the primary defect in each of the subgroups and will be helpful to define new CDG type II defects.  相似文献   

15.
INTroDUCTIONP-, E- and L-selectin are C-type lectins in-volved in the binding of circulating leukocytes tovarious target cellsll, 2]. The interaction(s) be-tween the selectins and the target cells is mediatedby oligosaccharide structures conjugated to specificligand molecules expressed on the taxget cell sur-faces. These ligand molecules may be recognized byone, two or all three of the selectins[1-31. AlthoughaVailable data suggest that the interaction(s) be-tween the selectins and their…  相似文献   

16.
17.
We present a detailed protocol for the structural analysis of protein-linked glycans. In this approach, appropriate for glycomics studies, N-linked glycans are released using peptide N-glycosidase F and O-linked glycans are released by reductive alkaline beta-elimination. Using strategies based on mass spectrometry (matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry and nano-electrospray ionization mass spectrometry/mass spectrometry (nano-ESI-MS-MS)), chemical derivatization, sequential exoglycosidase digestions and linkage analysis, the structures of the N- and/or O-glycans are defined. This approach can be used to study the glycosylation of isolated complex glycoproteins or of numerous glycoproteins encountered in a complex biological medium (cells, tissues and physiological fluids).  相似文献   

18.
The carbohydrate-deficient glycoprotein syndromes (CDGS) are a group of autosomal recessive multisystemic diseases characterized by defective glycosylation of N-glycans. This review describes recent findings on two patients with CDGS type II. In contrast to CDGS type I, the type II patients show a more severe psychomotor retardation, no peripheral neuropathy and a normal cerebellum. The CDGS type II serum transferrin isoelectric focusing pattern shows a large amount (95%) of disialotransferrin in which each of the two glycosylation sites is occupied by a truncated monosialo-monoantennary N-glycan. Fine structure analysis of this glycan suggested a defect in the Golgi enzyme UDP-GlcNAc:alpha-6-D-mannoside beta-1,2-N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase II (GnT II; EC 2.4.1.143) which catalyzes an essential step in the biosynthetic pathway leading from hybrid to complex N-glycans. GnT II activity is reduced by over 98% in fibroblast and mononuclear cell extracts from the CDGS type II patients. Direct sequencing of the GnT II coding region from the two patients identified two point mutations in the catalytic domain of GnT II, S290F (TCC to TTC) and H262R (CAC to CGC). Either of these mutations inactivates the enzyme and probably also causes reduced expression. The CDG syndromes and other congenital defects in glycan synthesis as well as studies of null mutations in the mouse provide strong evidence that the glycan moieties of glycoproteins play essential roles in the normal development and physiology of mammals and probably of all multicellular organisms.  相似文献   

19.
Secretory IgA (SIgA) is a multi-polypeptide complex consisting of a secretory component (SC) covalently attached to dimeric IgA containing one joining (J) chain. We present the analysis of both the N- and O-glycans on the individual peptides from this complex. Based on these data, we have constructed a molecular model of SIgA1 with all its glycans, in which the Fab arms form a T shape and the SC is wrapped around the heavy chains. The O-glycan regions on the heavy (H) chains and the SC N-glycans have adhesin-binding glycan epitopes including galactose-linked beta1-4 and beta1-3 to GlcNAc, fucose-linked alpha1-3 and alpha1-4 to GlcNAc and alpha1-2 to galactose, and alpha2-3 and alpha2-6-linked sialic acids. These glycan epitopes provide SIgA with further bacteria-binding sites in addition to the four Fab-binding sites, thus enabling SIgA to participate in both innate and adaptive immunity. We also show that the N-glycans on the H chains of both SIgA1 and SIgA2 present terminal GlcNAc and mannose residues that are normally masked by SC, but that can be unmasked and recognized by mannose-binding lectin, by disrupting the SC-H chain noncovalent interactions.  相似文献   

20.
Sialuria is an inborn error of metabolism characterized by coarse face, hepatomegaly and recurrent respiratory tract infections. The genetic defect in this disorder results in a loss of feedback control of UDP-N-acetylglucosamine 2-epimerase/N-acetylmannosamine-kinase by CMP-N-acetylneuraminic acid (CMP-NeuAc) resulting in a substantial overproduction of cytoplasmic free sialic acid. This study addresses fibroblast CMP-NeuAc levels and N- and O-glycan sialylation of serum proteins from Sialuria patients. CMP-NeuAc levels were measured with HPLC in fibroblasts. Isoelectric focusing (IEF) of serum transferrin and of apolipoprotein C-III (apoC-III) was performed on serum of three Sialuria patients. Isoforms of these proteins can be used as specific markers for the biosynthesis of N- and core 1 O-glycans. Furthermore, total N- and O-linked glycans from serum proteins were analyzed by HPLC. HPLC showed a clear overproduction of CMP-NeuAc in fibroblasts of a Sialuria patient. Minor changes were found for serum N-glycans and hypersialylation was found for core 1 O-glycans on serum apoC-III and on total serum O-glycans in Sialuria patients. HPLC showed an increased ratio of disialylated over monosialylated core 1 O-glycans. The hypersialylation of core 1 O-glycans is due to the increase of NeuAcalpha2,6-containing structures (mainly NeuAcalpha2-3Galbeta1-3[NeuAcalpha2-6]GalNAc). This may relate to KM differences between GalNAc-alpha2,6-sialyltransferase and alpha2,3-sialyltransferases. This is the first study demonstrating that the genetic defect in Sialuria results in a CMP-NeuAc overproduction. Subsequently, increased amounts of alpha2,6-linked NeuAc were found on serum core 1 O-glycans from Sialuria patients. N-glycosylation of serum proteins seems largely unaffected. Sialuria is the first metabolic disorder presenting with hypersialylated O-glycans.  相似文献   

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