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1.
Processing of N-linked oligosaccharides in soybean cultured cells   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Evidence, based on both in vivo and in vitro studies with suspension-cultured soybean cells, is presented to demonstrate the processing of the oligosaccharide chain of plant N-linked glycoproteins. Following a 1-h incubation of soybean cells with [2-3H]mannose, the predominant glycopeptide obtained by pronase digestion of the membrane fraction was a Man7- or Man8GlcNAc2-Asn (GlcNAc, N-acetylglucosamine). However, the major oligosaccharide isolated from the lipid-linked oligosaccharides of these cells was a Glc2- or Glc3Man9GlcNAc2. Soybean cells were incubated with [2-3H]mannose and the incorporation of mannose into Pronase-released glycopeptides was followed during a 2-h chase. During the first 10 min of labeling, the radioactivity was mostly in a large-sized glycopeptide that appeared to be a Glc1Man9GlcNAc2-peptide. During the next 60 to 90 min of chase, this radioactivity was shifted to smaller and smaller-sized glycopeptides indicating that removal of sugars (i.e., processing) had occurred. Both glucosidase and mannosidase activity was detected in membrane preparations of soybean cells. Nine different glycopeptides were isolated from Pronase digests of soybean cell membrane fractions. These glycopeptides were purified by repeated gel filtration on columns of Bio-Gel P-4. Partial characterization of these glycopeptides by endoglucosaminidase H and alpha-mannosidase digestion, and by analysis of the products, suggested the following glycopeptides: Glc1Man9GlcNAc2-Asn, Man8GlcNAc2-Asn, Man7GlcNAc2-Asn, Man6GlcNAc2-Asn, and Man5GlcNAc2-Asn.  相似文献   

2.
Quiescent thymocytes, mitogen-stimulated thymocytes and acute-leukaemic lymphoblasts provide a model for the study of protein glycosylation in quiescent cells, mitotically active non-malignant and malignant cells respectively. The biosynthesis of both complex and high-mannose-type oligosaccharides was monitored by metabolic labelling with [6-3]fucose and [2-3H]mannose. Bio-Gel P6 elution profiles of [6-3H]fucose-labelled glycopeptides showed that quiescent thymocytes and stimulated thymocytes synthesized qualitatively and quantitatively similar glycopeptides; however, higher-molecular-weight glycopeptides were synthesized by the acute-leukaemic lymphoblasts. The amount of [2(-3)H]mannose incorporated into glycopeptide by quiescent thymocytes was less than 10% of that incorporated by stimulated thymocytes. The Bio-Gel P6 elution profile of [2(-3)H]mannose-labelled glycopeptides from acute leukaemic lymphoblasts was qualitatively similar to that of stimulated thymocytes, with about 40% of the radioactivity incorporated into one glycopeptide peak. This glycopeptide was characterized by Bio-Gel P6 and concanavalin A affinity chromatography, radioactive-sugar analysis, sensitivity to alpha-mannosidase and endoglycosidase H and resistance to beta-glucosaminidase as containing a high-mannose oligosaccharide, possible of Man7-8GlcNAc2 structure. Pulse/chase experiments indicated that this high-mannose oligosaccharide was an end product and not a biosynthetic intermediate. It is concluded that higher-molecular-weight fucose-labelled glycopeptides are characteristic of the malignant cell type, and the synthesis of high-mannose oligosaccharide, Man7-8GlcNAc2, in stimulated thymocytes and acute-leukaemic lymphoblasts is associated with mitotically active cells.  相似文献   

3.
The influenza viral hemagglutinin contains L-fucose linked alpha 1,6 to some of the innermost GlcNAc residues of the complex oligosaccharides. In order to determine what structural features of the oligosaccharide were required for fucosylation or where in the processing pathway fucosylation occurred, influenza virus-infected MDCK cells were incubated in the presence of various inhibitors of glycoprotein processing to stop trimming at different points. After several hours of incubation with the inhibitors, [5,6-3H]fucose and [1-14C]mannose were added to label the glycoproteins, and cells were incubated in inhibitor and isotope for about 40 h to produce mature virus. Glycopeptides were prepared from the viral and the cellular glycoproteins, and these glycopeptides were isolated by gel filtration on Bio-Gel P-4. The glycopeptides were then digested with endo-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase H and rechromatographed on the Bio-Gel column. In the presence of castanospermine or 2,5-dihydroxymethyl-3,4-dihydroxypyrrolidine, both inhibitors of glucosidase I, most of the radioactive mannose was found in Glc3Man7-9GlcNAc structures, and these did not contain radioactive fucose. In the presence of deoxymannojirimycin, an inhibitor of mannosidase I, most of the [14C]mannose was in a Man9GlcNAc structure which was also not fucosylated. However, in the presence of swainsonine, an inhibitor of mannosidase II, the [14C]mannose was mostly in hybrid types of oligosaccharides, and these structures also contained radioactive fucose. Treatment of the hybrid structures with endoglucosaminidase H released the [3H]fucose as a small peptide (Fuc-GlcNAc-peptide), whereas the [14C]mannose remained with the oligosaccharide. The data support the conclusion that the addition of fucose linked alpha 1,6 to the asparagine-linked GlcNAc is dependent upon the presence of a beta 1,2-GlcNAc residue on the alpha 1,3-mannose branch of the core structure.  相似文献   

4.
Previously, Man8-14GlcNAc oligosaccharides were isolated from highly purified Saccharomyces cerevisiae invertase and shown by one-dimensional 1H NMR spectroscopy and alpha 1,2-linkage-specific mannosidase digestion to constitute a homologous series of nearly homogeneous compounds, which appeared to define the intermediates in oligosaccharide core synthesis in yeast (Trimble, R.B. and Atkinson, P.H. (1986) J. Biol. Chem., 261, 9815-9824). To evaluate whether invertase oligosaccharides reflected global core processing of yeast glycans, the soluble glycoprotein pool of disrupted log-phase cells was digested with endo-beta-N-acetyl-glucosaminidase H and Man8-13GlcNAc were isolated by Bio-Gel P-4 chromatography. Although analysis of each size class by one-dimensional 400 MHz and two-dimensional 500 MHz phase-sensitive COSY 1H NMR spectroscopy revealed considerable structural heterogeneity in all but Man8GlcNAc, the major positional isomer in Man9-13GlcNAc (approximately 50%) was identical to that previously elucidated on invertase. The heterogeneity resided in four families of oligosaccharides: (i) Glc3Man9GlcNAc----Man8 GlcNAc trimming intermediates; (ii) alpha-mannosidase degradation products of the principal isomers; (iii) mannan elongation intermediates; (iv) core structures with the alpha 1,2-linked mannose usually removed by the processing alpha-mannosidase. The potential for the vacuolar alpha-mannosidase (AMS1 gene product) to generate heterogeneity in vitro was confirmed by isolating oligosaccharides from AMS1 and ams1 yeast strains in the presence of a Man13GlcNAc[3H]-ol marker (where GlcNAc[3H]-ol is N-acetylglucosamin [1-3H]itol). Degradation of the Man13GlcNAc[3H]-ol to Man9-12GlcNAc[3H]-ol occurred in the former, but not in the latter. A role for the vacuolar alpha-mannosidase in generating at least some heterogeneity in vivo was inferred from the 1H NMR spectrum of the AMS1 Man11GlcNAc pool, which showed more structural isomerism than seen in the spectrum of a comparable ams1 Man11GlcNAc preparation. Thus, the principal biosynthetic pathway of inner core mannan in Saccharomyces is defined by the Man8-13GlcNAc oligosaccharides found on external invertase, while structural heterogeneity in these size classes results from precursor processing in the endoplasmic reticulum, core extension in the Golgi and metabolic degradation in the vacuole.  相似文献   

5.
The posttranslational processing of the asparagine-linked oligosaccharide chain of the major myelin glycoprotein (P0) by Schwann cells was evaluated in the permanently transected, adult rat sciatic nerve, where there is no myelin assembly, and in the crush injured nerve, where there is myelin assembly. Pronase digestion of acrylamide gel slices containing the in vitro labeled [3H]mannose and [3H]fucose P0 after electrophoresis permitted analysis of the glycopeptides by lectin affinity and gel filtration chromatography. The concanavalin A-Separose profile of the [3H]mannose P0 glycopeptides from the transected nerve revealed the high-mannose-type oligosaccharide as the predominant species (72.9%), whereas the normally expressed P0 glycoprotein that is assembled into the myelin membrane in the crushed nerve contains 82.9-91.9% of the [3H]mannose radioactivity as the complex-type oligosaccharide chain. Electrophoretic analysis of immune precipitates verified the [3H]mannose as being incorporated into P0 for both the transected and crushed nerve. The high-mannose-type glycopeptides of the transected nerve isolated from the concanavalin A-Sepharose column were hydrolyzed by endo-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase H, and the oligosaccharides were separated on Biogel P4. Man8GlcNAc and Man7GlcNAc were the predominant species with radioactivity ratios of 12.5/7.2/1.4/1.0 for the Man8, Man7, Man6, and Man5 oligosaccharides, respectively. Jack bean alpha-D-mannosidase gave the expected yields of free Man and ManGlcNAc from these high-mannose-type oligosaccharides. The data support the notion that at least two alpha-1,2-mannosidases are responsible for converting Man9GlcNAc2 to Man5GlcNAc2. The present experiments suggest distinct roles for each mannosidase and that the second mannosidase (I-B) may be an important rate-limiting step in the processing of this glycoprotein with the resulting accumulation of Man8GlcNAc2 and Man7GlcNAc2 intermediates. Pulse chase experiments, however, demonstrated further processing of this high-mannose-type oligosaccharide in the transected nerve. The [3H]mannose P0 glycoprotein with Mr of 27,700 having the predominant high-mannose-type oligosaccharide shifted its Mr to 28,500 with subsequent chase. This band at 28,500 was shown to have the complex-type oligosaccharide chain and to contain fucose attached to the core asparagine-linked GlcNAc residue. The extent of oligosaccharide processing of this down-regulated glycoprotein remains to be determined.  相似文献   

6.
The mannose analogue, 1-deoxymannojirimycin, which inhibits Golgi alpha-mannosidase I but not endoplasmic reticulum (ER) alpha-mannosidase has been used to determine the role of the ER alpha-mannosidase in the processing of the asparagine-linked oligosaccharides on glycoproteins in intact cells. In the absence of the inhibitor, the predominant oligosaccharide structures found on the ER glycoprotein 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA reductase in UT-1 cells are single isomers of Man6GlcNAc and Man8GlcNAc. In the presence of 150 microM 1-deoxymannojirimycin, the Man8GlcNAc2 isomer accumulates indicating that the 1-deoxymannojirimycin-resistant ER alpha-mannosidase is responsible for the conversion of Man9GlcNAc2 to Man8GlcNAc2 on reductase. The processing of Man8GlcNAc2 to Man6GlcNAc2, however, must be attributed to a 1-deoxymannojirimycin-sensitive alpha-mannosidase. When cells were radiolabeled with [2-(3)H]mannose for 15 h in the presence of 1-deoxymannojirimycin and then further incubated for 3 h in nonradioactive medium without inhibitor, the Man8GlcNAc2 oligosaccharides which accumulated during the labeling period were partially trimmed to Man6GlcNAc. This finding suggests that a second alpha-mannosidase, sensitive to 1-deoxymannojirimycin, resides in the crystalloid ER and is responsible for trimming the reductase oligosaccharide chain from Man8GlcNAc2 to Man6GlcNAc2. To determine if ER alpha-mannosidase is responsible for trimming the oligosaccharides of all glycoproteins from Man9GlcNAc to Man8GlcNAc, the total asparagine-linked oligosaccharides of rat hepatocytes labeled with [2-(3)H]mannose in the presence or absence of 1.0 mM 1-deoxymannojirimycin were examined. the inhibitor prevented the formation of complex oligosaccharides and caused a 30-fold increase in the amount of Man9GlcNAc2 and a 13-fold increase in the amount of Man8GlcNAc2 present on secreted glycoproteins. This result suggests that only one-third of the secreted glycoproteins is initially processed by ER alpha-mannosidase, and two-thirds are processed by Golgi alpha-mannosidase I or another 1-deoxymannojirimycin-sensitive alpha-mannosidase. The inhibitor caused only a 2.6-fold increase in the amount of Man9GlcNAc2 on cellular glycoproteins suggesting that a higher proportion of these glycoproteins are initially processed by the ER alpha-mannosidase. We conclude that some, but not all, hepatocyte glycoproteins are substrates for ER alpha-mannosidase which catalyzes the removal of a specific mannose residue from Man9GlcNAc2 to form a single isomer of Man8GlcNAc2.  相似文献   

7.
Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells normally form lipid-linked oligosaccharides having mostly the Glc3Man9GlcNAc2 oligosaccharide. However, when MDCK cells are incubated in 1 to 10 mM mannosamine and labeled with [2-3H]mannose, the major oligosaccharides associated with the dolichol were Man5GlcNAc2 and Man6GlcNAc2 structures. Since both of these oligosaccharides were susceptible to digestion by endo-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase H, the Man5GlcNAc2 must be different in structure than the Man5GlcNAc2 usually found as a biosynthetic intermediate in the lipid-linked oligosaccharides. Methylation analysis also indicated that this Man5GlcNAc2 contained 1----3 linked mannose residues. Since pulse chase studies indicated that the lesion was in biosynthesis, it appears that mannosamine inhibits the in vivo formation of lipid-linked oligosaccharides perhaps by inhibiting the alpha-1,2-mannosyl transferases. Although the lipid-linked oligosaccharides produced in the presence of mannosamine were smaller in size than those of control cells and did not contain glucose, the oligosaccharides were still transferred in vivo to protein. Furthermore, the oligosaccharide portions of the glycoproteins were still processed as shown by the fact that the glycopeptides were of the complex and hybrid types and were labeled with [3H]mannose or [3H]galactose. In contrast, control cells produced complex and high-mannose structures but no hybrid oligosaccharides were detected. The inhibition by mannosamine could be overcome by adding high concentrations of glucose to the medium.  相似文献   

8.
In the preceding report we demonstrated that the expression of two developmentally regulated alpha-mannosidase activities is induced in Dictyostelium discoideum during its differentiation from single-cell amoebae to multicellular organism (Sharkey, D. J., and Kornfeld, R. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266, 18477-18484). These activities, designated membrane alpha-mannosidase I (MI) and membrane alpha-mannosidase II (MII), were shown to have several properties in common with rat liver Golgi alpha-mannosidases I and II, respectively, suggesting that MI and MII may play a role in the processing of asparagine-linked oligosaccharides in developing D. discoideum. In this study we analyzed the structures of the asparagine-linked oligosaccharides synthesized by D. discoideum at various stages of development to determine the timing and extent of asparagine-linked oligosaccharide processing. Cells were labeled with [2-3H] mannose, and then total cellular glycoproteins were digested with Pronase to generate glycopeptides that were fractionated on concanavalin A-Sepharose. Glycopeptides from each fraction were digested with endoglycosidase H, both before and after desulfation by solvolysis, and the released, neutral oligosaccharides were sized by high pressure liquid chromatography. At early stages of development, D. discoideum contain predominantly large high mannose-type oligosaccharides (Man9GlcNAc and Man8GlcNAc). Some of these are modified by GlcNAc residues attached beta 1-4 to the mannose-linked alpha 1-6 to the beta-linked core mannose (the "intersecting" position), as well as by fucose, sulfate, and phosphate. In contrast, the oligosaccharides found at late stages of development (18-24 h) have an array of sizes from Man9GlcNAc to Man3GlcNAc. These are still modified by GlcNAc, fucose, sulfate, and phosphate, but the percent of larger high mannose oligosaccharides that are modified with GlcNAc in the intersecting position decreases after 6 h of development, in parallel with the decrease in the intersecting GlcNAc transferase activity. Similarly, the changes in the size of asparagine-linked oligosaccharides synthesized during development correlate well with the appearance of MI and MII activities and suggest that these developmentally regulated alpha-mannosidase activities function in the processing of these oligosaccharides. This is supported further by the observation that oligosaccharide processing was inhibited in late stage cells labeled in the presence of either deoxymannojirimycin, an inhibitor of MI, or swainsonine, an inhibitor of MII.  相似文献   

9.
Aspergillus fumigatus secretes a number of glycosidases into the culture medium when the cells are grown in a mineral salts medium containing guar flour (a galactomannan) as the carbon source. At least some of these glycosidases have been reported to be glycoproteins having N-linked oligosaccharides. In this study, we examined the effect of the glycoprotein processing inhibitor, castanospermine, on the structures of the N-linked oligosaccharides and on the secretion of various glycosidases. Cells were grown in the presence of various amounts of castanospermine; at different times of growth, samples of the media were removed for the measurement of enzymatic activity. Of the three glycosidases assayed, beta-hexosaminidase was most sensitive to castanospermine; and its activity was depressed 30 to 40% at 100 micrograms of alkaloid per ml and even more at higher alkaloid concentrations. On the other hand, beta-galactosidase activity was hardly diminished at castanospermine levels of up to 1 mg/ml, but significant inhibition was observed at 2 mg/ml. beta-Galactosidase was intermediate in sensitivity. Cells were grown in the presence or absence of castanospermine and labeled with [2-3H]mannose, [6-3H]glucosamine, or [1-3H]galactose to label the sugar portion of the glycoproteins. The secreted glycoproteins were digested with pronase to obtain glycopeptides, and these were identified on Bio-Gel P-4 (Bio-Rad Laboratories). The glycopeptides were then digested with endoglucosaminidase H to release the peptide portion of susceptible structures, and the released oligosaccharides were reisolated and identified on Bio-Gel P-4. The oligosaccharides from control and castanospermine-grown cells were identified by a combination of enzymatic and chemical studies. In control cells, the oligosaccharide appeared to be mostly Man8GlcNAc and Man9GlcNAc, whereas in the presence of alkaloid, the major structures were Glc3Man7GlcNAc and Glc3Man8GlcNAc. These data fit previous observations that castanospermine inhibits glucosidase I.  相似文献   

10.
Deoxymannojirimycin (dMM) was tested as an inhibitor of the processing of the oligosaccharide portion of viral and cellular N-linked glycoproteins. The NWS strain of influenza virus was grown in MDCK cells in the presence of various amounts of dMM, and the glycoproteins were labeled by the addition of 2-[3H]mannose to the medium. At levels of 10 micrograms/ml dMM or higher, most of the viral glycopeptides became susceptible to digestion by endoglucosaminidase H, and the liberated oligosaccharide migrated mostly like a Hexose9GlcNAc on a calibrated column of Bio-Gel P-4. This oligosaccharide was characterized as a typical Man9GlcNAc by a variety of chemical and enzymatic procedures. Deoxymannojirimycin gave rise to similar oligosaccharide structures in the cellular glycoproteins. In both the viral and the cellular glycoproteins, this inhibitor caused a significant increase in the amount of [3H]mannose present in the glycoproteins. Deoxymannojirimycin did not inhibit the incorporation of [3H]leucine into protein in MDCK cells, nor did it affect the yield or infectivity of NWS virus particles. However, its effect on mannose incorporation into lipid-linked saccharides depended on the incubation time, the virus strain, and the cell line. Thus, high concentrations of dMM showed some inhibition of mannose incorporation into lipid-linked oligosaccharides with the NWS strain in a 3-h incubation, but no inhibition was observed after 48 h of incubation. On the other hand, the PR8 strain was much more sensitive to dMM inhibition, and mannose incorporation into lipid-linked oligosaccharides was strongly inhibited when the virus was raised in chick embryo cells, but less inhibition was observed when this virus was grown in MDCK cells. Nevertheless, in these cases also, the major oligosaccharide structure in the glycoproteins was the Man9GlcNAc2 species.  相似文献   

11.
Mannosidase II was purified from mung bean seedlings to apparent homogeneity by using a combination of techniques including DEAE-cellulose and hydroxyapatite chromatography, gel filtration, lectin affinity chromatography, and preparative gel electrophoresis. The release of radioactive mannose from GlcNAc[3H]Man5GlcNAc was linear with time and protein concentration with the purified protein, did not show any metal ion requirement, and had a pH optimum of 6.0. The purified enzyme showed a single band on SDS gels that migrated with the Mr 125K standard. The enzyme was very active on GlcNAcMan5GlcNAc but had no activity toward Man5GlcNAc, Man9GlcNAc, Glc3Man9GlcNAc, or other high-mannose oligosaccharides. It did show slight activity toward Man3GlcNAc. The first product of the reaction of enzyme with GlcNAcMan5GlcNAc, i.e., GlcNAcMan4GlcNAc, was isolated by gel filtration and subjected to digestion with endoglucosaminidase H to determine which mannose residue had been removed. This GlcNAcMan4GlcNAc was about 60% susceptible to Endo H indicating that the mannosidase II preferred to remove the alpha 1,6-linked mannose first, but 40% of the time removed the alpha 1,3-linked mannose first. The final product of the reaction, GlcNAcMan3GlcNAc, was characterized by gel filtration and various enzymatic digestions. Mannosidase II was very strongly inhibited by swainsonine and less strongly by 1,4-dideoxy-1,4-imino-D-mannitol. It was not inhibited by deoxymannojirimycin.  相似文献   

12.
The effect of castanospermine on the processing of N-linked oligosaccharides was examined in the parent mouse lymphoma cell line and in a mutant cell line that lacks glucosidase II. When the parent cell line was grown in the presence of castanospermine at 100 micrograms/ml, glucose-containing high-mannose oligosaccharides were obtained that were not found in the absence of inhibitor. These oligosaccharides bound tightly to concanavalin A-Sepharose and were eluted in the same position as oligosaccharides from the mutant cells grown in the absence or presence of the alkaloid. The castanospermine-induced oligosaccharides were characterized by gel filtration on Bio-Gel P-4, by h.p.l.c. analysis, by enzymic digestions and by methylation analysis of [3H]mannose-labelled and [3H]galactose-labelled oligosaccharides. The major oligosaccharide released by endoglucosaminidase H in either parent or mutant cells grown in castanospermine was a Glc3Man7GlcNAc, with smaller amounts of Glc3Man8GlcNAc and Glc3Man9GlcNAc. On the other hand, in the absence of castanospermine the mutant produces mostly Glc2Man7GlcNAc. In addition to the above oligosaccharides, castanospermine stimulated the formation of an endoglucosaminidase H-resistant oligosaccharide in both cell lines. This oligosaccharide was characterized as a Glc2Man5GlcNAc2 (i.e., Glc(1,2)Glc(1,3)Man(1,2)Man(1,2)Man(1,3)[Man(1,6)]Man-GlcNAc-GlcNAc). Castanospermine was tested directly on glucosidase I and glucosidase II in lymphoma cell extracts by using [Glc-3H]Glc3Man9GlcNAc and [Glc-3H]Glc2Man9GlcNAc as substrates. Castanospermine was a potent inhibitor of both activities, but glucosidase I appeared to be more sensitive to inhibition.  相似文献   

13.
Processing of the asparagine-linked oligosaccharides at the known glycosylation sites on the mu-chain of IgM secreted by MOPC 104E murine plasmacytoma cells was investigated. Oligosaccharides present on intracellular mu-chain precursors were of the high mannose type, remaining susceptible to endo-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase H. However, only 26% of the radioactivity was released from [3H]mannose-labeled secreted IgM glycopeptides, consistent with the presence of high mannose-type and complex-type oligosaccharides on the mature mu-chain. [3H]Mannose-labeled cyanogen bromide glycopeptides derived from mu-chains of secreted IgM were isolated and analyzed to identify the glycopeptide containing the high mannose-type oligosaccharide from those containing complex-type structures. [3H]Mannose-labeled intracellular mu-chain cyanogen bromide glycopeptides corresponding to those from secreted IgM were isolated also, and the time courses of oligosaccharide processing at the individual glycosylation sites were determined. The major oligosaccharides on all intracellular mu-chain glycopeptides after 20 min of pulse labeling with [3H]mannose were identified as Man8GlcNAc2, Man9GlcNAc2, and Glc1Man9GlcNAc2. Processing of the oligosaccharide destined to become the high mannose-type structure on the mature protein was rapid. After 30 min of chase incubation the predominant structures of this oligosaccharide were Man5GlcNAc2 and Man6GlcNAc2 which were also identified on the high mannose-type oligosaccharide of the secreted mu-chain. In contrast, processing of oligosaccharides destined to become complex type was considerably slower. Even after 180 min of chase incubation, Man7GlcNAc2 and Man8GlcNAc2 were the predominant structures at some of these glycosylation sites. The isomeric structures of Man8GlcNAc2 obtained from all of the glycosylation sites were identical. Thus, the different rates of processing were not the result of a different sequence of alpha 1,2-mannose removal.  相似文献   

14.
The labelled glycopeptides obtained by Pronase digestion of rat intestinal epithelial cell membranes were examined by gel filtration after injection of D-[2-3H]mannose and L-[6-3H]fucose. Three labelled fraction were eluted in the following order from Bio-Gel P-6, Fraction I, which was excluded from the gel, was labelled mostly with [3H]fucose and slightly with [3H]mannose. Fraction II contained "complex" asparagine-linked oligosaccharides since it was labelled with [3H]mannose and [3H]fucose, was stable to mild alkali treatment, and resistant to endo-beta-N-acetyl-glucosaminidase H. Fraction III contained "high-mannose" asparagine-linked oligosaccharides, which were labelled with [3H]mannose, but not with [3H]fucose; these were sensitive to endo-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase H, and were adsorbed on concanavalin A-Sepharose and subsequently eluted with methyl alpha-D-mannopyranoside. The time course of incorporation of [3H]mannose into these glycopeptides in microsomal fractions showed that high-mannose oligosaccharides were precursors of complex oligosaccharides. The rate of this processing was faster in rapidly dividing crypt cells than in differentiated villus cells. The ratio of radioactively labelled complex oligosaccharides to high-mannose oligosaccharides, 3h after [3H]mannose injection, was greater in crypt than in villus-cell lateral membranes. Luminal membranes of both crypt and villus cells were greatly enriched in labelled complex oligosaccharides compared with the labelling in lateral-basal membranes. These studies show that intestinal epithelial cells are polarized with respect to the structure of the asparagine-linked oligosaccharides on their membrane glycoproteins. During differentiation of these cells quantitative differences in labelled membrane glycopeptides, But no major qualitative change, were observed.  相似文献   

15.
Biosynthesis of alpha-galactosidase A in cultured Chang liver cells   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
An investigation of the structure and biosynthesis of alpha-galactosidase A (alpha-D-galactoside glycohydrolase, EC 3.2.1.22) and its N-linked oligosaccharide chains was undertaken by metabolic labeling of Chang liver cells with [2-3H]mannose, immunoprecipitation of the activity, and examination of the resulting immunoprecipitates. From cells pulse labeled for 3 h, two radioactive bands with Mr = 58,000 and 49,000 were detected by SDS-gel electrophoresis; following a 20-h chase, only the Mr = 49,000 band was observed. Examination of the oligosaccharide fraction derived from pulse-labeled enzyme revealed that 18% of the asparagine-linked oligosaccharides were complex and 82% were high-mannose type. After a 20-h chase, 48% of the oligosaccharides were complex and 52% were high mannose. The high-mannose oligosaccharides of alpha-galactosidase A immunoprecipitated from both pulsed and pulse-chased cells had the same mobilities as Man8-9GlcNAc on thin-layer chromatography and Bio-Gel P-4. Two fractions of complex glycopeptides derived from the alpha-galactosidase A of pulsed and pulse-chased cells had the same migration on Bio-Gel P-4 as glucose oligomers containing 14 and 19-39 glucose units. Based on their apparent size and their behavior on concanavalin A-Sepharose, the complex oligosaccharides are believed to be composed of tri- and/or tetraantennary structures.  相似文献   

16.
We studied the effect of the plant alkaloid castanospermine on the biosynthesis and secretion of human hepatoma glycoproteins. The HepG-2 cells, grown in the presence or absence of the alkaloid, were labelled with [2-3H]mannose and then the labelled glycopeptides were prepared by Pronase digestion. This material was analysed by gel filtration on Bio-Gel P-4 before and after treatment with endo-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase H. Castanospermine caused an accumulation of high-mannose oligosaccharides, by 70-75% over control. The major accumulated product, which could also be labelled with [3H]galactose and was only partially susceptible to alpha-mannosidase digestion, was identified by h.p.l.c. as a Glc3Man9GlcNAc. Thus the alkaloid inhibits glucosidase I in the human hepatoma cells. Analysis of total glycoproteins secreted by the cells into the medium revealed the presence of only complex oligosaccharides in both control and treated cultures, and the amount of the oligosaccharides labelled with radioactive mannose, galactose or N-acetylmannosamine, secreted by treated cells, was decreased by about 60%. The rate of secretion of total protein labelled with [35S]methionine and precipitated from the medium with trichloroacetic acid was inhibited by up to 40% in the presence of castanospermine. Pulse-chase studies utilizing [35S]methionine labelling were performed to study the effect of the alkaloid on secretion of individual plasma proteins. Immunoprecipitation at different chase times with monospecific antisera showed that castanospermine markedly decreased the secretion rates of alpha 1-antitrypsin, caeruloplasmin and, to a lesser extent, that of antithrombin-III. Secretions of apolipoprotein E, a glycoprotein containing only O-linked oligosaccharide(s), and albumin, a non-glycosylated protein, were not affected by the drug. It is suggested that castanospermine inhibits secretion of at least some glycoproteins containing N-linked oligosaccharides, owing to the inhibition of oligosaccharide processing.  相似文献   

17.
We have shown previously that the processing of asparagine-linked oligosaccharides in baby hamster kidney (BHK) cells is blocked only partially by the glucosidase inhibitors, 1-deoxynojirimycin and N-methyl-1-deoxynojirimycin [Hughes, R. C., Foddy, L. & Bause, E. (1987) Biochem. J. 247, 537-544]. Similar results are now reported for castanospermine, another inhibitor of processing glucosidases, and a detailed study of oligosaccharide processing in the inhibited cells is reported. In steady-state conditions the major endo-H-released oligosaccharides contained glucose residues but non-glycosylated oligosaccharides, including Man9GlcNAc to Man5GlcNAc, were also present. To determine the processing sequences occurring in the presence of castanospermine, BHK cells were pulse-labelled for various times with [3H]mannose and the oligosaccharide intermediates, isolated by gel filtration and paper chromatography, characterized by acetolysis and sensitivity to jack bean alpha-mannosidase. The data show that Glc3Man9GlcNAc2 is transferred to protein and undergoes processing to produce Glc3Man8GlcNAc2 and Glc3Man7GlcNAc2 as major species as well as a smaller amount of Man9GlcNAc2. Glucosidase-processed intermediates, Glc1Man8GlcNAc2 and Glc1Man7GlcNAc2, were also obtained as well as a Man7GlcNAc2 species derived from Glc1Man7GlcNAc2 and different from the Man7GlcNAc2 isomer formed in the usual processing pathway. No evidence for the direct transfer of non-glucosylated oligosaccharides to proteins was obtained and we conclude that the continued assembly of complex-type glycans in castanospermine-inhibited BHK cells results from residual activity of processing glucosidases.  相似文献   

18.
The effects of various glycoprotein-processing inhibitors on the biosynthesis and secretion of N-linked glycoproteins was examined in cultured Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells. Since incorporation of [2-3H]mannose into lipid-linked saccharides and into glycoproteins was much greater in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) than in serum-supplemented basal medium (BME), most experiments were done in PBS. Castanospermine, an inhibitor of glucosidase I, caused the formation of glycoproteins having mostly Glc3Man7-9(GlcNAc)2 structures; deoxymannojirimycin, an inhibitor of mannosidase I, gave mostly glycoproteins with Man9(GlcNAc)2 structures; swainsonine, an inhibitor of mannosidase II, caused the accumulation of hybrid types of oligosaccharides. Castanospermine and swainsonine, either in PBS or in BME medium, had no effect on the incorporation of [2-3H]mannose or [5,6-3H]leucine into the secreted glycoproteins and, in fact, there was some increase in mannose incorporation in their presence. These inhibitors also did not affect mannose incorporation into cellular glycoproteins nor did they affect the biosynthesis as measured by mannose incorporation into lipid-linked saccharides. On the other hand in PBS medium, deoxymannojirimycin, at 25 micrograms/mL, caused a 75% inhibition in mannose incorporation into secreted glycoproteins, but had no effect on the incorporation of [3H]leucine into the secreted glycoproteins. Since deoxymannojirimycin also strongly inhibited mannose incorporation into lipid-linked oligosaccharides in PBS, the decreased amount of radioactivity in the secreted and cellular glycoproteins may reflect the formation of glycoproteins with fewer than normal numbers of oligosaccharide chains, owing to the low levels of oligosaccharide donor. However, in BME medium, there was only slight inhibition of mannose incorporation into lipid-linked saccharides and into cellular and secreted glycoproteins.  相似文献   

19.
Heterogeneities of the two ovalbumin glycopeptides, (Man)5(GlcNAc)2Asn and (Man)6(GlcNAc)2Asn, were revealed by borate paper electrophoresis of oligosaccharide alcohols obtained from the glycopeptides by endo-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase H digestion and NaB3H4 reduction. The structures of the major components of the oligosaccharides were determined by the combination of methylation analysis, acetolysis, and alpha-mannosidase digestion. Based on the results, the whole structures of the major components of (Man)5(GlcNAc)2Asn and (Man)6(GlcNAc)2Asn were elucidated as Manalpha1 leads to 6[Manalpha1 leads to 3]-Manalpha1 leads to 6[Manalpha1 leads to 3[Manbeta1 leads to 4GlcNAcbeta1 leads to 4GlcNAc leads to Asn and Manalpha1 leads to 6[Manalpha1 leads to 3]Manalpha1 leads to 6[Manalpha1 leads to 2Manalpha1 leads to 3]Manbeta1 leads to 4GlcNAcbeta1 leads to GlcNAc leads to Asn, respectively. Since endo-beta-N-acetylglucosamini dase D hydrolyzes (Man)5(GlcNAc)2Asn but not (Man)6(GlcNAc)2Asn, the presence of the unsubstituted alpha-mannosyl residue linked at the C-3 position of the terminal mannose of Manbeta1 leads to 4GlcNAcbeta1 leads to 4 GlcNAcAsn core must be essential for the action of the enzyme.  相似文献   

20.
Kifunensine, produced by the actinomycete Kitasatosporia kifunense 9482, is an alkaloid that corresponds to a cyclic oxamide derivative of 1-amino mannojirimycin. This compound was reported to be a weak inhibitor of jack bean alpha-mannosidase (IC50 of 1.2 x 10(-4) M) (Kayakiri, H., Takese, S., Shibata, T., Okamoto, M., Terano, H., Hashimoto, M., Tada, T., and Koda, S. (1989) J. Org. Chem. 54, 4015-4016). We also found that kifunensine was a poor inhibitor of jack bean and mung bean aryl-alpha-mannosidases, but it was a very potent inhibitor of the plant glycoprotein processing enzyme, mannosidase I (IC50 of 2-5 x 10(-8) M), when [3H]mannose-labeled Man9GlcNAc was used as substrate. However, kifunensine was inactive toward the plant mannosidase II. Studies with rat liver microsomes also indicated that kifunensine inhibited the Golgi mannosidase I, but probably does not inhibit the endoplasmic reticulum mannosidase. Kifunensine was tested in cell culture by examining its ability to inhibit processing of the influenza viral glycoproteins in Madin-Darby canine kidney cells. Thus, when kifunensine was placed in the incubation medium at concentrations of 1 microgram/ml or higher, it caused a complete shift in the structure of the N-linked oligosaccharides from complex chains to Man9(GlcNAc)2 structures, in keeping with its inhibition of mannosidase I. On the other hand, even at 50 micrograms/ml, deoxymannojirimyucin did not prevent the formation of all complex chains. Thus kifunensine appears to be one of the most effective glycoprotein processing inhibitors observed thus far, and knowledge of its structure may lead to the development of potent inhibitors for other processing enzymes.  相似文献   

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