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1.
The substrate specificity and subcellular location of the major sialidases of three types of rat blood cells were characterized and compared with those of the known three types of rat liver sialidase, which have been designated intralysosomal, cytosolic, and plasma membrane-associated sialidases. Platelets and leucocytes contain mainly an acid sialidase, which is highly active towards oligosaccharides and 4MU-NeuAc, and erythrocytes possess a high level of a sialidase acting on gangliosides. A Percoll gradient centrifugation study showed that the former is located in lysosomes and the latter in plasma membrane. When the sialidase was solubilized and partially purified from erythrocyte ghosts, the enzyme was found to hydrolyze actively gangliosides but only poorly other substrates such as 4MU-NeuAc, oligosaccharides, and glycoproteins. The sialidase partially purified from rat liver membrane fraction exhibited the same substrate specificity. It is concluded that the major sialidase of platelets and leucocytes corresponds to hepatic intralysosomal sialidase while erythrocytes contain almost exclusively a ganglioside sialidase which corresponds to hepatic plasma membrane sialidase.  相似文献   

2.
Ganglioside-hydrolyzing sialidase activity was solubilized from rat brain particulate fraction by using Triton X-100 plus sodium deoxycholate. When chromatographed on AH-Sepharose 4B, the solubilized activity was resolved into two peaks, which were designated sialidases I and II in order of elution. The two sialidases were purified by using sequential chromatographies on Octyl-Sepharose CL-4B, Phenyl-Sepharose CL-4B, and Sephadex G-200. Sialidase II was purified further by Mono Q-FPLC. Overall purification was 450- and 2,150-fold, for sialidases I and II, respectively. Purified sialidases I and II were maximally active at near pH 5.0 and exhibited M = 70,000 by gel filtration. Sialidase I hydrolyzed gangliosides but scarcely other substrates including 4-methylumbelliferyl-NeuAc (4MU-NeuAc). Sialidase II hydrolyzed oligosaccharides, glycoproteins, and 4MU-NeuAc although gangliosides appeared to be preferential substrates. Sialidase II cleaved GM2 much faster than sialidase I. An antibody raised in rabbits against sialidase I reacted with only sialidase I and an antibody against sialidase II reacted with only sialidase II. A subcellular distribution study suggested sialidase I in the synaptosomal membrane and sialidase II in the synaptosomal and lysosomal membranes, and this was verified by using the above antibodies.  相似文献   

3.
The inhibitory effect of various compounds on the activities of four types of rat sialidase was investigated. 2-Deoxy-2,3-dehydro-N-acetylneuraminic acid andN-acetylneuraminic acid were competitive inhibitors for the sialidases. The former was effective against cytosolic sialidase and intralysosomal sialidase more than two membrane-associated sialidases I and II, the latter being a much weaker inhibitor. A heavy metal ion such as Cu2+ (1mm) and thiol-modifying 4-hydroxymercuribenzoate (50 µm) caused complete inhibition of the activities of cytosolic sialidase and membrane sialidase I, while no decrease in the activities of intralysosomal sialidase and membrane sialidase II was observed. When 4-nitrophenyloxamic acid and siastatin B, inhibitors of bacterial sialidases, and synthetic thioglycoside GM3 analogue Neu5Ac-s-(2-6)Gal(1-4)Glc(1-1) ceramide, an inhibitor of influenza virus sialidase, were tested, they did not affect any activity of the rat sialidases. By the differential effect of these inhibitors, the four types of rat sialidase could be discriminated from one another and furthermore from viral and bacterial sialidases.Abbreviations Neu5Ac N-acetylneuraminic acid - Neu5Ac2en 2-deoxy-2,3-dehydro-N-acetylneuraminic acid - 4MU-Neu5Ac 4-methylumbelliferyl--N-acetyl-d-neuraminic acid  相似文献   

4.
Cytosolic sialidase A was extracted from pig brain and purified about 2000-fold with respect to the starting homogenate (about 550-fold relative to the cytosolic fraction). The enzyme preparation provided a single peak on Ultrogel AcA-34 column chromatography and had an apparent molecular weight of 4 x 10(4). On incubation with micellar ganglioside GT1b, (molecular weight of the micelle, 3.5 x 10(5)) under the conditions used for the enzyme assay, brain cytosolic sialidase A formed two ganglioside-enzyme complexes, I and II, which were isolated and characterized. Complex II had a molecular weight of 4.2 X 10(5), and a ganglioside/protein ratio (w/w) of 4:1. This is consistent with a stoichiometric combination of one ganglioside micelle and two enzyme molecules. Complex I was probably a dimer of complex II. In both complexes I and II cytosolic sialidase was completely inactive. Inactivation of cytosolic sialidase by formation of the corresponding complexes was also obtained with gangliosides GD1a and GD1b, which, like GT1b, are potential substrates for the enzyme and GM1, which is resistant to the enzyme action. Therefore, the enzyme becomes inactive after interacting with ganglioside micelles. GT1b-sialidase complexes acted as excellent substrates for free cytosolic sialidase, as did the complexes with GD1a and GD1b.  相似文献   

5.
Cultured human fibroblasts contain two sialidases that degrade gangliosides such as GM3: a lysosomal activity that appears identical with the activity towards water-soluble substrates and that is deficient in the genetic lysosomal disorder sialidosis, and another enzyme that seems localized on the external surface of the plasma membrane. In this report we show that both enzymes can be differentiated in the presence of each other by choice of the detergent used for activation, and also by the inhibitory action of some polyanionic compounds such as sulphated glycosaminoglycans. The lysosomal ganglioside GM3 sialidase is greatly stimulated by sodium glycodeoxycholate and, to lesser degrees, by sodium glycocholate and sodium cholate. The ganglioside GM3 sialidase of the plasma membrane is not measurably active under the conditions of the lysosomal enzyme but is specifically activated by the non-ionic detergent Triton X-100. The glycodeoxycholate-stimulated, but not the Triton-activated, ganglioside GM3 sialidase activity was profoundly diminished in cell lines from patients with the lysosomal disorders sialidosis and galactosialidosis; however, both activities were normal in fibroblasts from patients with mucolipidosis IV, previously thought to be a ganglioside sialidase deficiency disorder. Both the lysosomal and the plasma membrane ganglioside GM3 sialidases were inhibited by sialic acids, suramin, dextran sulphate and sulphated glycosaminoglycans. Among the latter, heparin and heparan sulphate showed a much higher inhibitory potency towards the plasma membrane ganglioside GM3 sialidase than towards the lysosomal onw.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
7.
Here we report the cDNA sequence of a human ganglioside sialidase. The cDNA was isolated from a human brain cDNA library by screening with a 240 bp probe generated by polymerase chain reaction using primers based on the sequences of rat cytosolic and bovine membrane sialidases which we previously cloned. The 3.0 kb cDNA encodes an open reading frame of 436 amino acids containing a putative transmenbrane domain and an Arg-Ile-Pro and three Asp-box sequences characteristic of sialidases and showing overall 83% and 39% identities to the bovine and rat enzymes, respectively. Northern blot analysis revealed high expression in skeletal muscle and testis, but low level in kidney, placenta, lung, and digestive organs. Transient expression of the cDNA in COS-1 cells resulted in a 130-fold increase in sialidase activity compared to the control level, and the activity was found to be almost specific for gangliosides. Fluorescent in situ hybridization allowed the human sialidase gene localized to chromosome 11 at q 13.5.  相似文献   

8.
We have totally sequenced a cytosolic sialidase [EC 3.2.1.18] by RT-PCR from the murine thymus (murine thymic sialidase, MTS) which has a 1844-base length (encoding 385 amino acids including two sialidase motifs) and is the longest cytosolic sialidase ever reported. MTS has high and relatively low homologies with those of mammalian cytosolic sialidases from the mouse brain (99%), rat (91%), and human skeletal muscle (75%), and those of the mouse lysosomal (47%) and membrane-bound (51%) sialidases, respectively. Chromosomal mapping, being the first report of mouse cytosolic sialidase gene, showed that the MTS gene is localized to the distal part of mouse chromosome 1D and to rat chromosome 9q36. RT-PCR with the site-specific primers revealed that the coding region was expressed in all organs tested, but expressions including the 5'-UTR were barely detectable except for in the upper-thymic fraction. Also, soluble sialidase activity in the thymus was the highest of these organs. There were mRNA instability signals and AT-rich regions in 143 bp of MTS 5'-end.  相似文献   

9.
We analyzed the subcellular localization of sialidases in human lymphocytes from a patient with adult type sialidosis with partial β-galactosidase deficiency and normal controls. Sialidase activities were measured with α,2 → 3 NeuAc-lactitol, 4-methylumbelliferyl-NeuAc and GM3 ganglioside as substrates. Sialidases in the lysosomes were sonication-labile and hydrolyzed mainly hydrophilic substrates such as NeuAc-lactitol and 4-methylumbelliferyl-NeuAc, but hydrolyzed subsidiarily GM3 ganglioside. On the other hand, sialidases in the plasma membrane were sonication-stable and hydrolyzed both hydrophilic substrates and GM3 ganglioside. In sialidosis with partial β-galactosidase deficiency, the sialidases of the lysosomes showed 3–5% activity toward hydrophilic substrates and 25% activity toward GM3 ganglioside as compared with sialidase activities of the controls. However, there are no differences in the activities of the sialidases in the plasma membrane. These results demonstrate that the essential defect in this disease is the deficiency of a lysosomal sialidase.  相似文献   

10.
Sensitive assays for the determination of the ganglioside sialidase activity of fibroblast homogenates were established using ganglioside GM3, 3H-labelled in the sphingosine moiety, as a substrate. Ganglioside GM3 sialidase activity was greatly stimulated by the presence of the non-ionic detergent Triton X-100 and was further enhanced by salts such as NaCl; the optimal pH was 4.5. The subcellular localization of this activity was determined by fractionation using free-flow electrophoresis and found to be exclusively associated with the marker for the plasma membrane, but not with that for lysosomes. This Triton-stimulated ganglioside sialidase activity was selectively inhibited by preincubating intact cells in the presence of millimolar concentrations of Cu2+, suggesting that the activity resides on the external surface of the plasma membrane. In normal fibroblasts homogenates, ganglioside GM3 sialidase was also greatly stimulated by sodium cholate. In contrast to the Triton X-100-activated reaction, however, it was not diminished by prior incubation of intact cells in the presence of Cu2+. Only after cell lysis was Cu2+ inhibitory. the cholate-stimulated ganglioside sialidase activity thus paralleled the behaviour of the lysosomal 4-methylumbelliferyl-alpha-D-N-acetylneuraminic acid (4-MU-NeuAc) sialidase. In fibroblasts from sialidosis patients, the cholate-stimulated ganglioside GM3 sialidase activity, but not that of the Triton-activated enzyme, was profoundly diminished. In fibroblasts from patients with mucolipidosis IV (ML IV), both the Triton X-100- and the cholate-stimulated ganglioside GM3 sialidase activities were in the range of normal controls. The Triton-activated enzyme was associated with the plasma membrane in the same manner as in normal cells. Our findings suggest that, in human fibroblasts, there exist two sialidases that degrade ganglioside GM3: one on the external surface of the plasma membrane, and another that is localized in lysosomes and seems identical with the activity that acts on sialyloligosaccharides and 4-MU-NeuAc. As neither activity was found to be deficient in ML IV fibroblasts, our results argue against the hypothesis of a primary involvement of a ganglioside GM3 sialidase in the pathogenesis of ML IV.  相似文献   

11.
A rapid small-scale procedure was set up to obtain highly purified preparations of lysosomes and plasma membranes from the homogenate of cerebellar granule cells differentiated in culture. It consisted in a centrifugation of the postnuclear fraction P2, on a Percoll gradient with formation of an upper and lower band. The upper band, upon centrifugation on 1 M sucrose, produced a light band lying on the top, that constituted the plasma membrane preparation. The upper band constituted the lysosome preparation. The plasma membrane preparation exhibited a 6-fold relative specific activity increase of Na+, K(+)-ATPase and 5'-nucleotidase, with negligible contamination by other subcellular markers; the lysosomal preparation exhibited a 30-fold relative specific activity increase of beta-galactosidase and beta-hexosaminidase, with virtually no contamination by other subcellular markers. Both the lysosome and plasma membrane preparations carried sialidase activity on MUB-NeuNAc and ganglioside GD1a. The sialidase activity on GD1a required the presence of Triton X-100 in both subcellular preparations; the sialidase activity on MUB-NeuNAc was markedly activated by albumin only in the lysosomes. The lysosomal sialidase had a unique optimal pH value, 3.9. The plasma membrane sialidase featured two values of optimal pH, one at 3.9, for both substrates and second at 5.4 and 6.0 for MUB-NeuNAc and GD1a, respectively. It is concluded that cerebellar granule cells differentiated in vitro possess one lysosomal sialidase and two plasma membrane sialidases, all of them active on ganglioside.  相似文献   

12.
The nature and developmental profile of the soluble sialidase of rat forebrain were studied from birth to 150 days. Forebrain was extracted by two procedures, one (mild) preserving, the other (drastic) destroying nerve endings. The soluble extracts obtained by the mild procedure contained 64–78% of the total tissue cytosol, assayed as lactate-dehydrogenase; those obtained by the drastic procedure 87–94%. These latter extracts were considered as the soluble fraction containing ‘all’ tissue cytosol. The cytosolic origin of the sialidase contained in the soluble extracts at all examined ages was suggested by the following evidence: (a) during extraction sialidase behaved as lactate-dehydrogenase and quite differently from β-hexosaminidase and β-galactosidase, enzymes of lysosomal nature present in the same extracts, (b) the sialidase content of the extract was not influenced by the presence or absence of EDTA in the medium, (c) the sialidase content in the extracts did not diminish even after prolonged centrifugation (2 h) at high speed (150,000 g). The content of cytosolic sialidase referred to g fresh tissue increased from birth to 20 days, and slowly decreased thereafter. Till 20 days the content and the developmental trend of the cytosolic enzyme were similar to that of the better known membrane bound sialidase. This latter enzyme, however, reached its maximum at about 60 days of age. The specific activity of the cytosolic sialidase was lower till 10 days of age, higher from 10 to 30 days, and equalled that of the membrane bound enzyme during adult life. Therefore rat forebrain cytosolic and membrane bound sialidases, also from the developmental point of view, behave as different enzymes.  相似文献   

13.
This review summarizes the current research on human exo-alpha-sialidase (sialidase, neuraminidase). Where appropriate, the properties of viral, bacterial, and human sialidases have been compared. Sialic acids are implicated in diverse physiological processes. Sialidases, as enzymes acting upon sialic acids, assume importance as well. Sialidases hydrolyze the terminal, non-reducing, sialic acid linkage in glycoproteins, glycolipids, gangliosides, polysaccharides, and synthetic molecules. Therefore, a variety of assays are available to measure sialidase activity. Human sialidase is present in several organs and cells. Its cellular distribution could be cytosolic, lysosomal, or in the membrane. Human sialidase occurs in a high molecular-mass complex with several other proteins, including cathepsin A and beta-galactosidase. Multi-protein complexation is important for the in vivo integrity and catalytic activity of the sialidase. However, multi-protein complexation, the occurrence of isoenzymes, diverse subcellular localization, thermal instability, and membrane association have all contributed to difficulties in purifying and characterizing human sialidases. Human sialidase isoenzymes have recently been cloned and sequenced. Even though crystal structures for the human sialidases are not available, the highly conserved regions of the sialidase from various organisms have facilitated molecular modeling of the human enzyme and raise interesting evolutionary questions. While the molecular mechanisms vary, genetic defects leading to human sialidase deficiency are closely associated with at least two well-known human diseases, namely sialidosis and galactosialidosis. No therapy is currently available for either disease. A thorough investigation of human sialidases is therefore crucial to human health.  相似文献   

14.
Purified liver lysosomes, prepared from rats previously injected with Triton WR-1339, exhibited sialidase activity towards sialyllactose, fetuin, submaxillary mucin (bovine) and gangliosides, and could be disrupted hypotonically with little loss in these activities. After centrifugation, the activities with sialyllactose and fetuin were largely recovered in the supernatant, demonstrating that they were originally in the intralysosomal space. The activities towards submaxillary mucin and gangliosides, on the other hand, remained in the pellet. In the supernatant, activity with fetuin or orosomucoid was markedly reduced by protease inhibitors, suggesting that proteolysis of these glycoproteins may be prerequisite to sialidase activity. The intralysosomal sialidase was solubilized from the mitochondrial-lysosomal fraction of rat liver and partially purified by Sephadex G-200, or Sephadex G-200 followed by CM-cellulose. The enzyme was maximally active at pH 4.7 with sialyllactose as substrate and had a minimum relative molecular mass of 60 000 +/- 5000 by gel filtration; it hydrolyzed a variety of sialooligosaccharides , those containing (alpha 2----3)sialyl linkages being better substrates than those with (alpha 2----6)sialyl linkages. The enzyme failed to attack submaxillary mucin and gangliosides. It was also inactive towards fetuin, orosomucoid and transferrin but capable of hydrolyzing glycopeptides from pronase digest of fetuin. In contrast to the intralysosomal sialidase, the sialidase partially purified from rat liver cytosol by (NH4)2SO4 fractionation followed by chromatography on DEAE-cellulose and CM-cellulose hydrolyzed fetuin and orosomucoid to the extent about half that for sialyllactose. The enzyme was maximally active at pH 5.8 and had a relative molecular mass of approximately 60 000. It also hydrolyzed gangliosides but not submaxillary mucin.  相似文献   

15.
Occurrence in Brain Lysosomes of a Sialidase Active on Ganglioside   总被引:3,自引:3,他引:0  
A lysosomal preparation, obtained from brain homogenate of 17-day-old C57BL mice by centrifugation on a self-generating Percoll linear density gradient, showed relative specific activity (RSA) values for typical lysosomal enzymes of 40-120 and for mitochondria, plasma membrane, and cytosol markers of much lower than 1, a result indicating a high degree of homogeneity. The lysosomal preparation contained a sialidase activity that was assayed radiometrically with ganglioside [3H]GD1a and fluorimetrically with 4-methylumbelliferyl-1-alpha-D-N-acetylneuraminic acid (MUB-NeuAc). The properties of the lysosomal enzyme were compared with those of the plasma membrane-bound sialidase contained in a purified synaptosomal plasma membrane fraction that was prepared from the same homogenate and assayed with the same substrates. The optimal pH was 4.2 for the lysosomal and 5.1 for the plasma membrane-bound enzyme. The apparent Km values for GD1a and MUB-NeuAc were 1.5 X 10(-5) and 4.2 X 10(-5) M, respectively, for the lysosomal enzyme and 2.7 X 10(-4) and 6.3 X 10(-5) M for the plasma membrane-bound one. Triton X-100 had a predominantly inhibitory effect on the lysosomal enzyme, whereas it strongly activated the plasma membrane-bound one. The lysosomal enzyme was highly unstable on storage and freezing and thawing cycles, whereas the plasma membrane-bound one was substantially stable. The RSA value of the lysosomal sialidase in the lysosomal fraction closely resembled that of authentic lysosomal enzymes, whereas the RSA value of plasma membrane-bound sialidase in the plasma membrane fraction was very similar to that of typical plasma membrane markers.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
Sialidase Activity in Nuclear Membranes of Rat Brain   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
Abstract: A highly purified nuclear membrane preparation was obtained from adult rat brain and examined for sialidase activity using GM3, GD1a, GD1b, or N -acetylneuramin lactitol as the substrate. The nuclear membranes contained an appreciable level of sialidase activity; the specific activities toward GM3 and N -acetylneuramin lactitol were 20.5 and 23.8% of the activities in the total brain homogenate, respectively. The sialidase activity in nuclear membranes showed substrate specificity distinct from other membrane-bound sialidases localized in lysosomal membranes, synaptosomal plasma membranes, or myelin membranes. These results strongly suggest the existence of a sialidase activity associated with the nuclear membranes from rat brain.  相似文献   

17.
Rat cytosolic sialidase is expressed at elevated levels in skeletal muscle and is believed to play a role in the myogenic differentiation of muscle cells. Here, we observed varying levels of enhancement of sialidase activity in the presence a range of divalent cations. In particular, a significant enhancement of activity was observed in the presence of Ca2+. Conversely, inhibition of the sialidase activity was found when the enzyme was incubated in the presence of Cu2+, EDTA, and a range of carbohydrate-based inhibitors. Finally, an investigation of the enzymatic hydrolysis of a synthetic substrate, 4-methylumbelliferyl N-acetyl-alpha-D-neuraminide, by 1H NMR spectroscopy revealed that the reaction catalysed by rat skeletal muscle cytosolic sialidase proceeds with overall retention of anomeric configuration. This result further supports the notion that all sialidases appear to be retaining enzymes.  相似文献   

18.
The action of sialidases on substrates containing O-acetylsialic acids   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
O-Acetyl substitution of sialic acids in glycoconjugates reduces the rate of action of sialidases on these substrates. A plasma glycoprotein fraction and an erythrocyte ganglioside containing 4-O-acetylsialic acids were isolated and characterized from equine blood, and a sialyllactose preparation with Neu5,9Ac2 was purified from rat urine. Using the novel substrates II3Neu4Ac5Gc-LacCer and II3Neu5,9Ac2-Lac the influence of individual mono-O-acetylated sialic acids on bacterial and viral sialidases could be clearly shown. This extends and clarifies observations with glycoproteins containing mixtures of mono-, di- and higher O-acetylated sialic acids with substitution at the hydroxyls on carbons 4, 7, 8 and 9. A 4-O-acetyl substitution in sialic acids blocks the action of bacterial sialidases for substrates containing these derivatives, while viral enzymes show low but significant activity, reflected in Km and Vmax values. A small reduction in bacterial sialidase activity was observed for II3Neu5,9Ac2-Lac relative to II3Neu5Ac-Lac in agreement with kinetic analysis. Newcastle disease virus sialidase showed a 50% reduction in hydrolysis rate for the 9-O-acetylated substrate and ten-fold reductions of both Km and Vmax values.  相似文献   

19.
Sialidase (EC 3.2.1.18) catalyzes the release of sialic acid from sialo-oligosaccharides, gangliosides, or sialo-glycoproteins. In this investigation, we cloned a novel cDNA for mouse brain sialidase and expressed the cDNA in COS-7 cells. This 1,699 bp cDNA codes for a 41.6 kDa protein consisting of 372 deduced amino acid residues. In COS-7 cells transiently transfected with the cDNA, a 250-fold increase was observed in specific activity toward 2'-(4-methylumbelliferyl)-alpha-D-N-acetylneuraminic acid. Similarity searches of the nonredundant GenBank peptide sequence database by the PSI-BLAST program identified rat, hamster, human, and bacterial sialidases homologous to this mouse brain sialidase. Amino acid sequence identities to rat and hamster sialidases (84% and 77%, respectively) suggest that this form of sialidase is conserved in rodents. Sequence identities to human and mouse lysosomal sialidases (30% and 28%, respectively) indicate that the mouse brain sialidase is distinct from the lysosomal enzyme. Mouse brain sialidase has two amino acid sequence motifs common to bacterial sialidases: the 'F/YRIP' motif and the 'Asp-box' motif. The 'F/YRIP' motif is present near the N terminus while two 'Asp-box' motifs are present downstream.  相似文献   

20.
Summary Plasma membranes and lysosomes were isolated from rat liver and assayed for sialidase activity with gangliosides and sialyllactose as substrates. Plasma membrane and lysosomal activities differed in substrate preference, heat stability, inhibition by Cu2+,K m values and pH dependence. It is concluded that plasma membranes and lysosomes contain different sialidases. Hepatoma plasma membranes also exhibited sialidase activity towards the two substrates.  相似文献   

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