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1.
Functional interactions of the influenza virus glycoproteins   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Hemagglutinin (HA) and neuraminidase (NA) are functionally related coat glycoproteins of the influenza virus (Flu). HA interacts with terminal sialyl residues of oligosaccharides and ensures the binding of the virus particle to the cell surface. NA is a receptor-destroying enzyme that removes sialyl residues from oligosaccharides contained in cell and virus components and thereby prevents aggregation of virus particles. Analysis of reasortants combining low-functional NA of human Flu with HA of avian Flu showed that sialyl residues are not completely removed in some cases. With high HA affinity for sialyl substrates, such virus particles aggregate, aggregates accumulate on the cell surface, and virus yield decreases. Serial passaging of low-yield aggregating reassortants may lead to selection of high-yield variants, which do not aggregate. A loss of aggregation is due to a decrease in HA affinity for high-molecular-weight sialyl substrates. On evidence of sequencing of the HA gene in original reassortants and their nonaggregating variants, HA affinity is reduced and aggregation lost owing to a mechanism common for different HA antigenic subtypes (H2, H3, H4, and H13). This is an increase in the negative charge as a result of an amino acid substitution in the vicinity of the receptor-binding pocket of HA. Taken together, these findings suggest a way of postreassortment adaptation which improves the functional match of HA and NA. The experimental system employed provides a model of natural processes associated with generation of Flu variants having a pandemic potential.  相似文献   

2.
Influenza virus A (FluA) reassortants with low-functional neuraminidase (NA) of subtype N1 and hemagglutinin (HA) of subtypes H2, H3, H4, and H13 display virion aggregation and accumulate to a lower titer because sialyl residues are not completely removed from virion components. Nonaggregating variants of FluA (H13N1) were shown to result from a mutation that reduces the HA affinity for sialyl substrates. Amino acid substitution K156E, which increases a negative charge at the edge of the receptor-binding pocket of HA large subunit (HA1), was revealed in two independent variants. This substitution was the only difference between HA1 of the original reassortant and one of its variants and, therefore, accounted for restoration of the functional match between HA and NA.  相似文献   

3.
Influenza virus A (FluA) reassortants with low-functional neuraminidase (NA) of subtype N1 and hemagglutinin (HA) of subtypes H2, H3, H4, and H13 display virion aggregation and accumulate to a lower titer because sialyl residues are not completely removed from virion components. Nonaggregating variants of FluA (H13N1) were shown to result from a mutation that reduces the HA affinity for sialyl substrates. Amino acid substitution K156E, which increases a negative charge at the edge of the receptor-binding pocket of HA large subunit (HA1), was revealed in two independent variants. This substitution was the only difference between HA1 of the original reassortant and one of its variants and, therefore, accounted for restoration of the functional match between HA and NA.  相似文献   

4.
Balanced action of hemagglutinin (HA) and neuraminidase (NA) is an important condition of influenza virus efficient replication, but a role of HA and NA specificities at oligosaccharide level in maintaining such a balance remains poorly studied. Avian virus HA binds exclusively and NA digests efficiently α2–3-sialylated carbohydrate chains, while human virus HA interacts with α2–6 chains and low-active NA cleaves both α2–3- and α2–6-sialosides. Reassortment between viruses leading to appearance of avian virus HA and human virus NA on the virion surface often resulted in decreasing the replicative potential of the formed variants because of disturbance of a functional balance between “alien” HA and NA. A restoration of the reassortant productivity happened due to the appearance of amino acid substitutions in HA and, sometimes, NA. Here, a role of NA and HA oligosaccharide specificities in a restoration of HA–NA functional balance in high-yield passage variants was studied. Postreassortment changes in HA receptor-binding and NA substrate specificities for three reassortant/passage variant virus pairs towards 3′SiaLac, 3′SiaLacNAc, SiaLec, SiaLea, SiaLex, 6′SiaLac, and 6′SiaLacNAc were determined. Selection of the high-yield variants of the human-avian reassortants led either to twofold decrease in the affinity of HA for most α2–3-sialosides and the appearance of affinity for α2–6-sialosides (H3N2 reassortant), or to decreasing the HA affinity for SiaLec and SiaLea (H3N1 reassortant), or to enhancing the ability of NA to discriminate between α2–3/2–6 substrates (H4N1 reassortant). Thus, all postreassortment changes in oligosaccharide specificities of “alien” HA and NA were directed towards their adjustment to each other, but by different manner.  相似文献   

5.
The hemagglutinin (HA) of fowl plague virus A/FPV/Rostock/34 (H7N1) carries two N-linked oligosaccharides attached to Asn123 and Asn149 in close vicinity to the receptor-binding pocket. In previous studies in which HA mutants lacking either one (mutants G1 and G2) or both (mutant G1,2) glycosylation sites had been expressed from a simian virus 40 vector, we showed that these glycans regulate receptor binding affinity (M. Ohuchi, R. Ohuchi, A. Feldmann, and H. D. Klenk, J. Virol. 71:8377-8384, 1997). We have now investigated the effect of these mutations on virus growth using recombinant viruses generated by an RNA polymerase I-based reverse genetics system. Two reassortants of influenza virus strain A/WSN/33 were used as helper viruses to obtain two series of HA mutant viruses differing only in the neuraminidase (NA). Studies using N1 NA viruses revealed that loss of the oligosaccharide from Asn149 (mutant G2) or loss of both oligosaccharides (mutant G1,2) has a pronounced effect on virus growth in MDCK cells. Growth of virus lacking both oligosaccharides from infected cells was retarded, and virus yields in the medium were decreased about 20-fold. Likewise, there was a reduction in plaque size that was distinct with G1,2 and less pronounced with G2. These effects could be attributed to a highly impaired release of mutant progeny viruses from host cells. In contrast, with recombinant viruses containing N2 NA, these restrictions were much less apparent. N1 recombinants showed lower neuraminidase activity than N2 recombinants, indicating that N2 NA is able to partly overrule the high-affinity binding of mutant HA to the receptor. These results demonstrate that N-glycans flanking the receptor-binding site of the HA molecule are potent regulators of influenza virus growth, with the glycan at Asn149 being dominant and that at Asn123 being less effective. In addition, we show here that HA and NA activities need to be highly balanced in order to allow productive influenza virus infection.  相似文献   

6.
The structure and heterogeneity of carbohydrate chains of hemagglutinin (HA) and neuraminidase (NA), the surface glycoproteins of influenza virus A/Krasnodar/101/59 (H2N2), were investigated. Hemagglutinin was reduced with beta-mercaptoethanol and its heavy (HA1) and light (HA2) chains were separated by gel chromatography. Amino acid and sugar composition of HA1, HA2 and NA was elucidated. The carbohydrate chains of the glycoproteins were cleaved off by the alkaline LiBH4 treatment and oligosaccharides were reduced with NaB[3H]4. They were fractionated by subsequent two-step HPLC on Ultrasphere-C8 and Zorbax-NH2 columns with simultaneous identification using nonlabelled oligosaccharides of known structures. Some of the major oligosaccharides isolated from HA1, HA2 and NA were thus identified as high mannose chains, containing 5-9 mannose residues, and complex chains, first of all biantennary chains having or not having bisecting N-acetylglucosamine and/or fucose residues. The approach which has been developed enables one to study the structure and heterogeneity of carbohydrate chains starting from one nmole of a desialylated N-glycoprotein.  相似文献   

7.
In this study, we investigated the role of the conserved neuraminidase (NA) cytoplasmic tail residues in influenza virus replication. Mutants of influenza A virus (A/WSN/33 [H1N1]) with deletions of the NA cytoplasmic tail region were generated by reverse genetics. The resulting viruses, designated NOTAIL, contain only the initiating methionine of the conserved six amino-terminal residues. The mutant viruses grew much less readily and produced smaller plaques than did the wild-type virus. Despite similar levels of NA cell surface expression by the NOTAIL mutants and wild-type virus, incorporation of mutant NA molecules into virions was decreased by 86%. This reduction resulted in less NA activity per virion, leading to the formation of large aggregates of progeny mutant virions on the surface of infected cells. A NOTAIL virus containing an additional mutation (Ser-12 to Pro) in the transmembrane domain incorporated three times more NA molecules into virions than did the NOTAIL parent but approximately half of the amount incorporated by the wild-type virus. However, aggregation of the progeny virions still occurred at the cell surface. All NOTAIL viruses were attenuated in mice. We conclude that the cytoplasmic tail of NA is not absolutely essential for virus replication but exerts important effects on the incorporation of NA into virions and thus on the aggregation and virulence of progeny virus. In addition, the relative abundance of long filamentous particles formed by the NOTAIL mutants, compared with the largely spherical wild-type particles, indicates a role for the NA cytoplasmic tail in virion morphogenesis.  相似文献   

8.
The main surface glycoprotein, hemagglutinin (HA), was obtained by treatment of influenza virus B/Leningrad/179/86 with bromelain. Amino acid and monosaccharide compositions of HA and neuraminidase (NA, earlier isolated from the same virus) were determined, thus showing HA and NA to contain 8-10 and 2 carbohydrate chains, respectively. The carbohydrate fragments were cleaved off by the alkaline LiBH4 treatment, the oligosaccharides released were reduced with NaB3H4 and fractionated by two-step HPLC on Ultrasphere-C18 and Zorbax-NH2 columns. Some higher mannose and complex oligosaccharides were identified in both cases by comparison with nonlabelled oligosaccharides of the known structure. The data obtained show that surface glycoproteins of influenza virus A and B are rather similar with regard to structure and heterogeneity of their carbohydrate chains.  相似文献   

9.
Reassortment of influenza A virus genes enables antigenic shift resulting in the emergence of pandemic viruses with novel hemagglutinins (HA) acquired from avian strains. Here, we investigated whether historic and contemporary avian strains with different replication capacity in human cells can donate their hemagglutinin to a pandemic human virus. We performed double-infections with two avian H3 strains as HA donors and a human acceptor strain, and determined gene compositions and replication of HA reassortants in mammalian cells. To enforce selection for the avian virus HA, we generated a strictly elastase-dependent HA cleavage site mutant from A/Hong Kong/1/68 (H3N2) (Hk68-Ela). This mutant was used for co-infections of human cells with A/Duck/Ukraine/1/63 (H3N8) (DkUkr63) or the more recent A/Mallard/Germany/Wv64-67/05 (H3N2) (MallGer05) in the absence of elastase but presence of trypsin. Among 21 plaques analyzed from each assay, we found 12 HA reassortants with DkUkr63 (4 genotypes) and 14 with MallGer05 (10 genotypes) that replicated in human cells comparable to the parental human virus. Although DkUkr63 replicated in mammalian cells at a reduced level compared to MallGer05 and Hk68, it transmitted its HA to the human virus, indicating that lower replication efficiency of an avian virus in a mammalian host may not constrain the emergence of viable HA reassortants. The finding that HA and HA/NA reassortants replicated efficiently like the human virus suggests that further HA adaptation remains a relevant barrier for emergence of novel HA reassortants.  相似文献   

10.
Direct labeling of virus particles is a powerful tool for the visualization of virus–cell interaction events. However, this technique involves the chemical modification of viral proteins that affects viral biological properties. Here we describe an alternative approach of influenza virus labeling that utilizes Function-Spacer-Lipid(FSL) constructs that can be gently inserted into the virus membrane. We assessed whether labeling with fluorescent(fluo-Ad-DOPE) or biotin-labeled(biot-CMG2-DOPE) probes has any deleterious effect on influenza virus hemagglutinin(HA) receptor specificity, neuraminidase(NA) activity, or replicative ability in vitro. Our data clearly show that neither construct significantly affected influenza virus infectivity or viral affinity to sialyl receptors. Neither construct influenced the NA activities of the influenza viruses tested, except the A/Puerto Rico/8/34(H1N1) strain. Our data indicate that lipid labeling provides a powerful tool to analyze influenza virus infection in vitro.  相似文献   

11.
ts5, a temperature-sensitive mutant of influenza B virus, belongs to one of seven recombination groups. When the mutant infected MDCK cells at the nonpermissive temperature (37.5 degrees C), infectious virus was produced at very low levels compared with the yield at the permissive temperature (32 degrees C) and hemagglutinating and enzymatic activities were undetectable. However, viral protein synthesis and transport of hemagglutinin (HA) and neuraminidase (NA) to the cell surface were not affected. The NA was found as a monomer within cells even at 32 degrees C, in contrast to wild-type virus NA, existing mostly as an oligomer, but the mutant had oligomeric NA, like the wild-type virus. Its enzymatic activity was more thermolabile than that of wild-type virus. Despite the low yield, large aggregates of progeny virus particles were found to accumulate on the cell surface at the nonpermissive temperature, and these aggregates were broken by treatment with bacterial neuraminidase, with the concomitant appearance of hemagglutinating activity, suggesting that NA prevents the aggregation of progeny virus by removal of neuraminic acid from HA and cell receptor, allowing its release from the cells. Further treatment with trypsin resulted in the recovery of infectivity. When bacterial NA was added to the culture early in infection, many hemagglutinable infectious virus was produced. We also suggest that the removal of neuraminic acid from HA by NA is essential for the subsequent cleavage of HA by cellular protease. Nucleotide sequence analysis of RNA segment 6 revealed that ts5 encoded five amino acid changes in the NA molecule but not in NB.  相似文献   

12.
R Ohuchi  M Ohuchi  W Garten    H D Klenk 《Journal of virology》1997,71(5):3719-3725
The influenza A virus hemagglutinin (HA) has three conserved oligosaccharides located in the stem region at asparagine residues 12, 28, and 478. The biological role of these oligosaccharides has been investigated by mutational analysis of HA of fowl plague virus that was expressed from a simian virus 40 vector in the presence of ammonium chloride for protection from acid denaturation in the trans-Golgi network. Resistance to endoglycosidase H and cleavage of HA into the subunits HA1 and HA2 have been analyzed as markers for intracellular transport. Cell surface exposure has been determined by hemadsorption following neuraminidase treatment, by immunofluorescence staining, and by fluorescence-activated cell sorter analysis. When all three stem oligosaccharides were removed, transport was almost completely blocked. When two of the three stem oligosaccharides, particularly those at asparagine residues 12 and 28, were missing, HA was transported to the surface but showed extremely low fusion activity. With mutants lacking one stem oligosaccharide, fusion was reduced to a lesser extent. Removal of stem oligosaccharides resulted also in an increase in the pH optimum required for fusion. On the other hand, no reduction in fusion activity was observed when oligosaccharides in the head region of the HA spike were removed. These results indicate that the conserved oligosaccharides in the stem stabilize HA in the form susceptible to the conformational change necessary for fusion.  相似文献   

13.
In the vast majority of influenza A viruses characterized to date, hemagglutinin (HA) is the receptor-binding and fusion protein, whereas neuraminidase (NA) is a receptor-cleaving protein that facilitates viral release but is expendable for entry. However, the NAs of some recent human H3N2 isolates have acquired receptor-binding activity via the mutation D151G, although these isolates also appear to retain the ability to bind receptors via HA. We report here the laboratory generation of a mutation (G147R) that enables an N1 NA to completely co-opt the receptor-binding function normally performed by HA. Viruses with this mutant NA grow to high titers even in the presence of extensive mutations to conserved residues in HA''s receptor-binding pocket. When the receptor-binding NA is paired with this binding-deficient HA, viral infectivity and red blood cell agglutination are blocked by NA inhibitors. Furthermore, virus-like particles expressing only the receptor-binding NA agglutinate red blood cells in an NA-dependent manner. Although the G147R NA receptor-binding mutant virus that we characterize is a laboratory creation, this same mutation is found in several natural clusters of H1N1 and H5N1 viruses. Our results demonstrate that, at least in tissue culture, influenza virus receptor-binding activity can be entirely shifted from HA to NA.  相似文献   

14.
To study the pathogenicity factors of the pandemic A(H1N1) influenza virus, a number of mutant variants of the A/Hamburg/5/2009 (H1N1)pdm09 strain were obtained through passage in chicken embryos, mouse lungs, and MDCK cell culture. After 17 lung-to-lung passages of the A/Hamburg/5/2009 in mice, the minimum lethal dose of the derived variant decreased by five orders of magnitude compared to that of the parental virus. This variant differed from the original virus by nine amino acid residues in the following viral proteins: hemagglutinin (HA), neuraminidase (NA), and components of the polymerase complex. Additional passaging of the intermediate variants and cloning made it possible to obtain pairs of strains that differed by a single amino acid substitution. Comparative analysis of replicative activity, receptor specificity, and virulence of these variants revealed two mechanisms responsible for increased pathogenicity of the virus for mice. Thus, (1) substitutions in HA (Asp225Gly or Gln226Arg) and compensatory mutation decreasing the charge of HA (Lys123Asn, Lys157Asn, Gly158Glu, Asn159Asp, or Lys212Met) altered viral receptor-binding specificity and restored the functional balance between HA and NA; (2) Phe35Leu substitution in the PA protein increased viral polymerase activity.  相似文献   

15.
If highly pathogenic H5N1 influenza viruses acquire affinity for human rather than avian respiratory epithelium, will their susceptibility to neuraminidase (NA) inhibitors (the likely first line of defense against an influenza pandemic) change as well? Adequate pandemic preparedness requires that this question be answered. We generated and tested 31 recombinants of A/Vietnam/1203/04 (H5N1) influenza virus carrying single, double, or triple mutations located within or near the receptor binding site in the hemagglutinin (HA) glycoprotein that alter H5 HA binding affinity or specificity. To gain insight into how combinations of HA and NA mutations can affect the sensitivity of H5N1 virus to NA inhibitors, we also rescued viruses carrying the HA changes together with the H274Y NA substitution, which was reported to confer resistance to the NA inhibitor oseltamivir. Twenty viruses were genetically stable. The triple N158S/Q226L/N248D HA mutation (which eliminates a glycosylation site at position 158) caused a switch from avian to human receptor specificity. In cultures of differentiated human airway epithelial (NHBE) cells, which provide an ex vivo model that recapitulates the receptors in the human respiratory tract, none of the HA-mutant recombinants showed reduced susceptibility to antiviral drugs (oseltamivir or zanamivir). This finding was consistent with the results of NA enzyme inhibition assay, which appears to predict influenza virus susceptibility in vivo. Therefore, acquisition of human-like receptor specificity does not affect susceptibility to NA inhibitors. Sequence analysis of the NA gene alone, rather than analysis of both the NA and HA genes, and phenotypic assays in NHBE cells are likely to adequately identify drug-resistant H5N1 variants isolated from humans during an outbreak.  相似文献   

16.
A series of reassortants has been constructed by crossing of UV-inactivated avian influenza virus of H3N8 subtype and live human influenza virus of H1N1 subtype, adapted to growth in continuous canine kidney cell line (MDCK). The analysis of RNA duplexes has shown that the reassortants contain HA gene of avian influenza virus whereas the other genes belong to human parent virus. The reassortants were efficiently reproduced in MDCK cells at low temperature (limiting for the avian parent virus). The data suggest that the avian virus HA gene does not hamper the reproduction of reassortant viruses in mammalian cells under the conditions unfavorable for the multiplication of avian influenza subtype H3N8 viruses.  相似文献   

17.
Seven integral proteins (CE 9, HA 21, HA 116, HA 16, HA 4, HA 201, and HA 301) were isolated from rat hepatocyte plasma membranes by immunoaffinity chromatography on monoclonal antibody-Sepharose. Six of the proteins (all but HA 16) exhibit domain-specific localizations (either bile canalicular or sinusoidal/lateral) about the hepatocyte surface. We identified three of these protein antigens as leucine aminopeptidase (HA 201), dipeptidyl peptidase IV (HA 301), and the asialoglycoprotein receptor (HA 116). We also developed 125I-lectin blotting procedures that, when used in conjunction with chemical and glycosidase treatments, permitted a comparison of the types of oligosaccharides present on the seven proteins. All seven are sialoglycoproteins, based upon the effects of prior neuraminidase and periodate-aniline-cyanoborohydride treatments of blots on labeling by 125I-wheat germ agglutinin. 125I-labeled Ricinus communis agglutinin I and 125I-peanut agglutinin blotting of the desialylated proteins revealed few if any conventional O-linked oligosaccharides, suggesting that the sialyl residues represent termini of N-linked complex-type oligosaccharides. Depending upon the protein, we estimated the presence of 2-26 N-linked oligosaccharides/polypeptide chain from the Mr reductions accompanying chemical or enzymatic deglycosylation. Three of these mature plasma membrane proteins (HA 21, HA 116, and HA 4) have both high mannose-type and complex-type oligosaccharides on every copy of their polypeptide chains. The labeling of these three proteins by 125I-concanavalin A was sensitive to treatment with endoglycosidase H, and each exhibited a quantitative reduction in Mr after the treatment, as assessed independently by 125I-wheat germ agglutinin blotting. At this level of analysis, we were unable to discern differences in the types of oligosaccharides present on these seven glycoproteins that correlate with their patterns of expression within the plasma membrane domains of this polarized epithelial cell.  相似文献   

18.
The development of viral resistance to the neuraminidase (NA) inhibitor, 4-guanidino-Neu5Ac2en, of influenza viruses was studied by serial passage of A/Turkey/Minnesota/833/80 (H4N2) in Madin-Darby canine kidney cells in the presence of increasing concentrations of inhibitor. Resistant mutants selected after eight passages, had a 10,000-fold reduction in sensitivity to the inhibitor in plaque assays, but their affinity (1/Kd) to the inhibitor was similar to that of the parental virus. Electron microscopic analysis revealed aggregation of the mutant virus at the cell surface in the presence of the inhibitor. Sequence analysis established that a substitution had occurred in the NA (Arg-249 to Lys) and in the HA2 subunit of the hemagglutinin (Gly-75 to Glu), in the vicinity of the proposed second sialic acid binding site. The change of residue 249 appears to be a chance mutation, for we were unable to reisolate this mutant, whereas subsequent experiments indicate changes in the hemagglutinin. After 13 passages of the parental virus, mutants that were resistant to the high concentrations of inhibitor tested were obtained. These viruses retained their drug-resistant phenotype even after five passages without the inhibitor. Electron microscopic analysis revealed no aggregation of virus on the surface of infected cells in the presence of the inhibitor. Sequence analysis of the NA gene from these drug-resistant mutants revealed an additional substitution of Glu to Ala at the conserved amino acid residue 119. This substitution is responsible for reducing the affinity of the inhibitor to the NA. Our findings suggest that the emergence of mutants resistant to 4-guanidine-Neu5Ac2en is a multistep process requiring prolonged exposure to the inhibitor.  相似文献   

19.
Lu B  Zhou H  Ye D  Kemble G  Jin H 《Journal of virology》2005,79(11):6763-6771
The H3N2 influenza A/Fujian/411/02-like virus strains that circulated during the 2003-2004 influenza season caused influenza epidemics. Most of the A/Fujian/411/02 virus lineages did not replicate well in embryonated chicken eggs and had to be isolated originally by cell culture. The molecular basis for the poor replication of A/Fujian/411/02 virus was examined in this study by the reverse genetics technology. Two antigenically related strains that replicated well in embryonated chicken eggs, A/Sendai-H/F4962/02 and A/Wyoming/03/03, were compared with the prototype A/Fujian/411/02 virus. A/Sendai differed from A/Fujian by three amino acids in the neuraminidase (NA), whereas A/Wyoming differed from A/Fujian by five amino acids in the hemagglutinin (HA). The HA and NA segments of these three viruses were reassorted with cold-adapted A/Ann Arbor/6/60, the master donor virus for the live attenuated type A influenza vaccines (FluMist). The HA and NA residues differed between these three H3N2 viruses evaluated for their impact on virus replication in MDCK cells and in embryonated chicken eggs. It was determined that replication of A/Fujian/411/02 in eggs could be improved by either changing minimum of two HA residues (G186V and V226I) to increase the HA receptor-binding ability or by changing a minimum of two NA residues (E119Q and Q136K) to lower the NA enzymatic activity. Alternatively, recombinant A/Fujian/411/02 virus could be adapted to grow in eggs by two amino acid substitutions in the HA molecule (H183L and V226A), which also resulted in the increased HA receptor-binding activity. Thus, the balance between the HA and NA activities is critical for influenza virus replication in a different host system. The HA or NA changes that increased A/Fujian/411/02 virus replication in embryonated chicken eggs were found to have no significant impact on antigenicity of these recombinant viruses. This study demonstrated that the reverse genetics technology could be used to improve the manufacture of the influenza vaccines.  相似文献   

20.
Cell surface glycans and recognition molecules of these glycans play important roles in cellular recognition and trafficking, such as in the inflammation response by sialyl LewisX oligosaccharides. Malignant cells also utilize a similar mechanism during colonization and establishment of tumor tissues in the host. These considerations prompt us to develop a screening method for comprehensive analysis of N-glycans derived from membrane fractions of cancer cells. The method involves two step separations. Initially, N-glycans released from cell membrane fractions with N-glycoamidase F were labeled with 2-aminobenzoic acid and separated based on the number of sialic acid residues attached to the oligosaccharides using affinity chromatography on a serotonin-immobilized stationary phase. Each of the nonretarded fractions containing asialo- and high-mannose type oligosaccharides and mono-, di-, tri-, and tetra-sialooligosaccharide fractions which were desialylated with neuraminidase was analyzed by a combination of HPLC using an Amide-80 column as the stationary phase and matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS). We analyzed total N-glycan pools of membrane fractions obtained from some cancer cells, and found that U937 cells (Histocytic lymphoma cells) expressed a large amount of oligosaccharides having polylactosamine residues and MKN45 cells (Gastric adenocarcinoma cells) contained hyper-fucosylated oligosaccharides which contained multiple fucose residues. The method described here will be a powerful technique for glycomics studies in cell surface glycoproteins, and will enable one to search marker oligosaccharides characteristically observed in various diseases such as cancer, inflammation, and congenital disorder.  相似文献   

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