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1.
The Leishmania parasite glycocalyx is rich in galactose-containing glycoconjugates that are synthesized by specific glycosyltransferases that use UDP-galactose as a glycosyl donor. UDP-galactose biosynthesis is thought to be predominantly a de novo process involving epimerization of the abundant nucleotide sugar UDP-glucose by the UDP-glucose 4-epimerase, although galactose salvage from the environment has been demonstrated for Leishmania major. Here, we present the characterization of an L. major UDP-sugar pyrophosphorylase able to reversibly activate galactose 1-phosphate into UDP-galactose thus proving the existence of the Isselbacher salvage pathway in this parasite. The ordered bisubstrate mechanism and high affinity of the enzyme for UTP seem to favor the synthesis of nucleotide sugar rather than their pyrophosphorolysis. Although L. major UDP-sugar pyrophosphorylase preferentially activates galactose 1-phosphate and glucose 1-phosphate, the enzyme is able to act on a variety of hexose 1-phosphates as well as pentose 1-phosphates but not hexosamine 1-phosphates and hence presents a broad in vitro specificity. The newly identified enzyme exhibits a low but significant homology with UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylases and conserved in particular is the pyrophosphorylase consensus sequence and residues involved in nucleotide and phosphate binding. Saturation transfer difference NMR spectroscopy experiments confirm the importance of these moieties for substrate binding. The described leishmanial enzyme is closely related to plant UDP-sugar pyrophosphorylases and presents a similar substrate specificity suggesting their common origin.  相似文献   

2.
Raffinose family oligosaccharides (RFOs) are almost ubiquitous in seeds and have been hypothesized to constitute an important energy source during germination. To test this hypothesis we applied a specific alpha-galactosidase inhibitor (1-deoxygalactonojirimycin, DGJ) to germinating pea seeds, resulting in a complete blocking of RFO breakdown. The germination rates of DGJ-treated seeds dropped drastically to about 25% of controls two days after imbibition. Similarly, the activities of the key enzymes in the galactose salvage pathway galactokinase, UDP-galactose pyrophosphorylase and UDP-galactose 4'-epimerase, were also significantly lower in seeds treated with the inhibitor. The inhibitory effect on germination could be relieved by galactose but only partially by sucrose, indicating that galactose, in addition to providing easily available energy for growth, may also be an important component of the sugar signaling pathway during germination. Taken together our study, for the first time, provides clear evidence that RFOs play an important role for early germination.  相似文献   

3.
alpha-Lactalbumin was isolated from milk of M. eugenii and its concentration in milk samples taken at various times during lactation (0-40 weeks post partum) was determined by single radial immunodiffusion using rabbit antiserum to the purified protein. The alpha-lactalbumin concentration remained almost constant throughout lactation even though the concentration of total lactose (free lactose plus lactose contained in oligosaccharides) fell to zero after 34 weeks post partum. This fall in lactose was accompanied by a rise in the free galactose and glucose concentrations and marked increases in UDP-galactose hydrolase, nucleotide pyrophosphatase, alkaline phosphatase and acid beta-galactosidase activities. It is suggested that the in vitro hydrolysis of UDP-galactose was due to nucleotide pyrophosphatase and that this enzyme may also play a role in vivo late in lactation by making UDP-galactose unavailable for the synthesis of lactose. Alternatively, lactose and lactose-containing oligosaccharides might be degraded by the acid beta-galactosidase during or after secretion.  相似文献   

4.
alpha-Galactosyl epitopes (or alpha-Gal, oligosaccharides with a terminal Galalpha1,3Gal sequence) are a class of biologically important oligosaccharides in great demand in bulk quantities for basic and clinical studies on preventing hyperacute rejection in pig-to-primate organ xenotransplantation. A truncated bovine alpha-1, 3-galactosyltransferase, the key enzyme responsible for the biosynthesis of the terminal structure of alpha-Gal, was cloned and overexpressed previously. The acceptor specificity was further studied in the present paper, and lactose and galactose derivatives were found to be good acceptors. To develop a more proficient reaction process, we report herein an example of an efficient enzymatic synthesis of alpha-Gal oligosaccharides catalyzed by the combination of two recombinant Escherichia coli whole cells harboring the genes of a UDP-galactose 4-epimerase and the alpha-1, 3-galactosyltransferase, respectively. Using lactosyl azide (LacN(3)) as the acceptor for the glycosyltransferase, the combined use of the two recombinant cells efficiently produced alpha-Gal epitope Gal alpha1,3LacN(3) in 60-68% yield.  相似文献   

5.
The glucose analog 5-thio-d-glucose, a potent inhibitor of glucose transport across membranes, was examined as an acceptor and/or inhibitor of lactose synthetase (UDP-galactose: D-glucose 1-galactosyltransferase, EC 2.4.1.22). Thioglucose was an effective acceptor for lactose synthetase with a Km of 7.4 mM. Under identical conditions the Km for D-glucose in this reaction was 5.4 mM. Thioglucose was 45 to 50% as effective an acceptor as D-glucose. Thioglucose acted as a pseudo substrate having a different Km and Vmax. Thus, thioglucose could be considered to the be a competitive substrate for lactose synthetase. thetase. The product of the lactose synthetase reaction with thioglucose as an acceptor had a thin-layer chromatographic retardation factor slightly higher than that for lactose. Upon treatment of the reaction product with β-galactosidase, galactose and thioglucose were released. These observations suggest that the product of the lactose synthetase reaction with thioglucose was thiolactose.  相似文献   

6.
In Lactococcus lactis subsp. cremoris FD1, galactose and lactose are both transported and phosphorylated by phosphotransferase systems. Lactose 6-phosphate (lactose-6P) is hydrolyzed intracellularly to galactose-6P and glucose. Glucose enters glycolysis as glucose-6P, whereas galactose-6P is metabolized via the tagatose-6P pathway and enters glycolysis at the tagatose diphosphate and fructose diphosphate pool. Galactose would therefore be a gluconeogenic sugar in L. lactis subsp. cremoris FD1, but since fructose 1,6-diphosphatase is not present in this strain, galactose cannot serve as an essential biomass precursor (glucose-6P or fructose-6P) but only as an energy (ATP) source. Analysis of the growth energetics shows that transition from N limitation to limitation by glucose-6P or fructose-6P gives rise to a very high growth-related ATP consumption (152 mmol of ATP per g of biomass) compared with the value in cultures which are not limited by glucose-6P or fructose-6P (15 to 50 mmol of ATP per g of biomass). During lactose metabolism, the galactose flux through the tagatose-6P pathway (r(max) = 1.2 h) is lower than the glucose flux through glycolysis (r(max) = 1.5 h) and intracellular galactose-6P is dephosphorylated; this is followed by expulsion of galactose. Expulsion of a metabolizable sugar has not been reported previously, and the specific rate of galactose expulsion is up to 0.61 g of galactose g of biomass h depending on the lactose flux and the metabolic state of the bacteria. Galactose excreted during batch fermentation on lactose is reabsorbed and metabolized when lactose is depleted from the medium. In vitro incubation of galactose-6P (50 mM) and permeabilized cells (8 g/liter) gives a supernatant containing free galactose (50 mM) but no P(i) (less than 0.5 mM). No organic compound except the liberated galactose is present in sufficient concentration to bind the phosphate. Phosphate is quantitatively recovered in the supernatant as P(i) by hydrolysis with alkaline phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.1), whereas inorganic pyrophosphatase (EC 3.6.1.1) cannot hydrolyze the compound. The results indicate that the unknown phosphate-containing compound might be polyphosphate.  相似文献   

7.
UDP-galactose appears to be produced on one side of a membrane barrier, opposite the galactosyltransferases that use it as a sugar donor. The translocation of activated galactose across membranes was studied in rat submaxillary-gland microsomal vesicles and in rat liver Golgi vesicles. When these intact vesicles containing the acceptor, N-acetylglucosamine, were incubated in the presence of UDP-galactose and two inhibitors of galactosyltransferase activity, the product, N-acetyl-lactosamine, formed within the vesicles. Thus at least the galactose moiety of UDP-galactose crossed the membranes. When intact Golgi vesicles were incubated with UDP-galactose labelled in both the uridine and the galactose moieties, labelled N-acetyllactosamine was again produced in the vesicles, but less than stoichiometric amounts of the uridine label was found there. Calculation of internal and external concentrations of UMP, a major product released from the cleaved uridine moiety, showed that the vesicles were actually enriched in UMP. When free UMP was incubated with the vesicles, this enrichment did not occur. This result was direct evidence for facilitated transport of UDP-galactose into the Golgi for use by galactosyltransferase.  相似文献   

8.
The role of the enzymes uridine-5'-diphospho-(UDP) glucose pyrophosphorylase and UDP galactose 4-epimerase in exopolysaccharide production of Gal ropy and non-ropy strains of Streptococcus thermophilus in a batch culture was investigated. Growth of the ropy and non-ropy strains was accompanied by total release of the galactose moiety from lactose hydrolysis in modified Bellinker broth with lactose as the only carbon source. This was associated with a greater exopolysaccharide production by the ropy strain. The polymer produced by both strains in cultures with lactose or glucose as carbon sources contained glucose, galactose and rhamnose, indicating that glucose was used as a carbon source for bacterial growth and for exopolysaccharide formation. UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase activity was associated with polysaccharide production during the first 12 h in a 20 h culture in the ropy strain, but not in the non-ropy strain. UDP-galactose 4-epimerase was not associated with exopolysaccharide synthesis in any strain. The evidence presented suggests that the glucose moiety from lactose hydrolysis is the source of sugar for heteropolysaccharide synthesis, due to a high UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase activity.  相似文献   

9.
10.
The role of the enzymes uridine-5'-diphospho-(UDP) glucose pyrophosphorylase and UDP galactose 4-epimerase in exopolysaccharide production of Gal- ropy and non-ropy strains of Streptococcus thermophilus in a batch culture was investigated. Growth of the ropy and non-ropy strains was accompanied by total release of the galactose moiety from lactose hydrolysis in modified Bellinker broth with lactose as the only carbon source. This was associated with a greater exopolysaccharide production by the ropy strain. The polymer produced by both strains in cultures with lactose or glucose as carbon sources contained glucose, galactose and rhamnose, indicating that glucose was used as a carbon source for bacterial growth and for exopolysaccharide formation. UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase activity was associated with polysaccharide production during the first 12 h in a 20 h culture in the ropy strain, but not in the non-ropy strain. UDP-galactose 4-epimerase was not associated with exopolysaccharide synthesis in any strain. The evidence presented suggests that the glucose moiety from lactose hydrolysis is the source of sugar for heteropolysaccharide synthesis, due to a high UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase activity.  相似文献   

11.
Curdlan-producing Agrobacterium sp. is unique in possessing a highly efficient UDP-glucose regeneration system. A broad-host-range expression strategy was successfully developed to exploit the unique metabolic capability for UDP-galactose regeneration during oligosaccharide synthesis. The engineered Agrobacterium cells functioned as a UDP-galactose regeneration system, allowing galactose-containing disaccharides to be synthesized from glucose or other simple sugars. Unexpectedly, a lag period of 24h preceded the active synthesis, which could be eliminated with rifampicin. An intracellular nucleotide profiling revealed that the UMP level was elevated by 3.8 fold in the presence of rifampicin, suggesting that rifampicin simulated a nitrogen-limitation condition that triggered the metabolic change. Product selectivity was improved nearly 40-fold by using high acceptor concentration and restricting glucose supply. N-acetyllactosamine concentration near 20 mM (7.5 g/l) was obtained, demonstrating the effectiveness of the engineered strain in UDP-galactose regeneration. This organism could be engineered to regenerate other UDP-sugar nucleotides using the same strategy as illustrated here.  相似文献   

12.
The synthesis of non-cellulosic polysaccharides and glycoproteins in the plant cell Golgi apparatus requires UDP-galactose as substrate. The topology of these reactions is not known, although the orientation of a plant galactosyltransferase involved in the biosynthesis of galactomannans in fenugreek is consistent with a requirement for UDP-galactose in the lumen of the Golgi cisternae. Here we provide evidence that sealed, right-side-out Golgi vesicles isolated from pea stems transport UDP-galactose into their lumen and transfer galactose, likely to polysaccharides and other acceptors. In addition, we identified and cloned AtUTr1, a gene from Arabidopsis thaliana that encodes a multitransmembrane hydrophobic protein similar to nucleotide sugar transporters. Northern analysis showed that AtUTr1 is indeed expressed in Arabidopsis. AtUTr1 is able to complement the phenotype of MDCK ricin-resistant cells; a mammalian cell line deficient in transport of UDP-galactose into the Golgi. In vitro assays using a Golgi-enriched vesicle fraction obtained from Saccharomyces cerevisiae expressing AtUTr1-MycHis is able to transport UDP-galactose but also UDP-glucose. AtUTr1- MycHis does not transport GDP-mannose, GDP-fucose, CMP-sialic acid, UDP-glucuronic acid, or UDP-xylose when expressed in S. cerevisiae. AtUTr1 is the first transporter described that is able to transport UDP-galactose and UDP-glucose. Thus AtUTr1 may play an important role in the synthesis of glycoconjugates in Arabidopsis that contain galactose and glucose.  相似文献   

13.
Schizosaccharomyces pombe has eight hexose transporter genes, ght1 + to ght8 +. Here we report that ght2 +, which is highly expressed in the presence of glucose, is essential for UDP-galactose synthesis from extracellular galactose when cells grow on glucose. The galactosylation defect of a uge1Δ mutant defective in synthesis of UDP-galactose from glucose was suppressed in galactose-containing medium, but disruption of ght2 + in the uge1Δ mutant reversed suppression of the galactosylation defect. Expression of Saccharomyces cerevisiae GAL2 in uge1Δght2Δ cells suppressed the defective galactosylation phenotype in galactose-containing medium. These results indicate that galactose is transported from the medium to the cytosol in a Ght2-dependent manner, and is then converted into UDP-galactose.  相似文献   

14.
15.
The effects of O-glycosylation on the synthesis and secretion of apolipoprotein E (apoE, a glycoprotein with O- but not N-linked sugars) were studied with a UDP-galactose/UDP-N-acetylgalactosamine 4-epimerase-deficient cell mutant (ldlD cells) which expresses a reversible defect in protein O-glycosylation. Under normal culture conditions the mutant ldlD cells cannot add N-acetylgalactosamine (GalNAc) to proteins. GalNAc is the first sugar of mucin-type O-linked oligosaccharides attached to the protein. This O-glycosylation defect is rapidly corrected when GalNAc is added to the culture medium. These cells also require external sources of galactose for the addition of this sugar to O-linked and other oligosaccharides. A bovine papilloma virus-based expression vector for human apoE and the human metallothionein 1A gene were transfected into ldlD cells, and apoE-expressing cell clones resistant to CdCl2 were selected and used in the present studies. The structure and secretion of apoE in these cells were examined by immunoprecipitation and one- and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and autoradiography. The synthesis, rate, and extent of secretion of apoE were unaffected by O-glycosylation (GalNAc-independent). In the presence of both galactose and GalNAc, multiple apoE isoforms were synthesized in ldlD cells as a result of variation in the extent of sialylation. ApoE sialylation was dependent on the addition of galactose as well as GalNAc to the extracellular medium, suggesting that addition of galactose to the nascent oligosaccharide chains was required for the addition of sialic acid.  相似文献   

16.
The galK gene, encoding galactokinase of the Leloir pathway, was insertionally inactivated in Streptococcus mutans UA159. The galK knockout strain displayed only marginal growth on galactose, but growth on glucose or lactose was not affected. In strain UA159, the sugar phosphotransferase system (PTS) for lactose and the PTS for galactose were induced by growth in lactose and galactose, although galactose PTS activity was very low, suggesting that S. mutans does not have a galactose-specific PTS and that the lactose PTS may transport galactose, albeit poorly. To determine if the galactose growth defect of the galK mutant could be overcome by enhancing lactose PTS activity, the gene encoding a putative repressor of the operon for lactose PTS and phospho-beta-galactosidase, lacR, was insertionally inactivated. A galK and lacR mutant still could not grow on galactose, although the strain had constitutively elevated lactose PTS activity. The glucose PTS activity of lacR mutants grown in glucose was lower than in the wild-type strain, revealing an influence of LacR or the lactose PTS on the regulation of the glucose PTS. Mutation of the lacA gene of the tagatose pathway caused impaired growth in lactose and galactose, suggesting that galactose can only be efficiently utilized when both the Leloir and tagatose pathways are functional. A mutation of the permease in the multiple sugar metabolism operon did not affect growth on galactose. Thus, the galactose permease of S. mutans is not present in the gal, lac, or msm operons.  相似文献   

17.
The effect of oral administration of galactose, lactose, and sucrose and intravenous injection of galactose on the urinary excretion of blood-group-active oligosaccharides has been studied. Galactose given either as the free sugar, a glycoside (lactose) or a constituent of normal diet was an absolute requirement for the formation and excretion of A-trisaccharide, B-trisaccharide and 2'-fucosylgalactose in blood group A, B and O(H) secretors, respectively. Great individual variation was seen in the amounts of galactose-dependent oligosaccharides excreted. Injection of galactose resulted in excretion of 3-59% of the amount of oligosaccharide formed after oral administration to the same individual. The mean ratio A-trisaccharide/B-trisaccharide was 2.7 in four blood-group-A1B secretors and 0.22 in three A2B secretors and can thus serve as a parameter for chemical differentiation between the two blood groups. The excretion of larger blood-group-active oligosaccharides, including the A-pentasaccharide, the B-pentasaccharide and lactodifucotetraose, that are normal components in urine from, respectively, starved A, B, and H secretors, was about the same after oral administration of galactose or lactose. The B-trisaccharide was the only oligosaccharide detected in plasma after oral galactose administration to a blood-group-B secretor individual. The concentration was 0.38 mg/l of plasma.  相似文献   

18.
The galK gene, encoding galactokinase of the Leloir pathway, was insertionally inactivated in Streptococcus mutans UA159. The galK knockout strain displayed only marginal growth on galactose, but growth on glucose or lactose was not affected. In strain UA159, the sugar phosphotransferase system (PTS) for lactose and the PTS for galactose were induced by growth in lactose and galactose, although galactose PTS activity was very low, suggesting that S. mutans does not have a galactose-specific PTS and that the lactose PTS may transport galactose, albeit poorly. To determine if the galactose growth defect of the galK mutant could be overcome by enhancing lactose PTS activity, the gene encoding a putative repressor of the operon for lactose PTS and phospho-β-galactosidase, lacR, was insertionally inactivated. A galK and lacR mutant still could not grow on galactose, although the strain had constitutively elevated lactose PTS activity. The glucose PTS activity of lacR mutants grown in glucose was lower than in the wild-type strain, revealing an influence of LacR or the lactose PTS on the regulation of the glucose PTS. Mutation of the lacA gene of the tagatose pathway caused impaired growth in lactose and galactose, suggesting that galactose can only be efficiently utilized when both the Leloir and tagatose pathways are functional. A mutation of the permease in the multiple sugar metabolism operon did not affect growth on galactose. Thus, the galactose permease of S. mutans is not present in the gal, lac, or msm operons.  相似文献   

19.
The activity of alpha-galactosyltransferase in cultured rat pheochromocytoma subcloned (PC12h) cells was examined using Gb3 as the acceptor for the galactose from UDP-galactose. The major reaction product was identified as gal alpha 1-3Gb3 based on its mobility on thin-layer chromatographic (TLC) plates and susceptibility to specific galactosidases. The enzyme activity in PC12h cells was the highest at pH 7.0 while the presence of Triton CF-54 (0.1%) and Mn2+ (5 mM) was required for its full activity. The apparent Km values for Gb3 and UDP-galactose were 57 and 17 microM, respectively. The enzyme activity in PC12h cells was compared with that in parent PC12 cells, in which gal alpha 1-3Gb3 is not expressed in an appreciable amount. In the enzyme reaction with exogenous Gb3, the enzyme activity in PC12h cells was about 1.5-fold higher than that in PC12 cells. In the absence of exogenous Gb3, this difference became even more pronounced; gal alpha 1-3Gb3 was generated from endogenous Gb3 at a much higher rate in PC12h cells than in PC12 cells. These findings suggest that the higher level of the alpha-galactosyltransferase activity in PC12h cells may, at least in part, be responsible for the accumulation of unique neutral glycosphingolipids having gal alpha 1-3 terminal residues in the cells.  相似文献   

20.
Human milk oligosaccharides (HMOs) are beneficial for infants’ health and growth. As one of the most abundant oligosaccharides in human milk, 2′-fucosyllactose (2′-FL) has been approved to supplement in infant formula. Microbial synthesis of 2′-FL achieved in E. coli tends to use a T7-expression system for the heterologous expression of the fucosyltransferase and/or enzymes involved in fucose metabolism. In this paper, we report a novel bioconversion route of 2′-FL by engineering a low pH triggered colanic acid (CA) synthetic pathway, found in E. coli S17−3, which supplies GDP-l-fucose for in vivo 2′-FL formation catalyzed by the heterologous α-1,2-fucosyltransferases. In medium added with 10 g/L lactose and 20 g/L glycerol, recombinant S17−3 was able to produce 0.617 g/L of 2′-FL. The concentration of 2′-FL came to 1.029 g/L when a heterologous pathway for the synthesis of polyhydroxybutyrate was additionally introduced in the engineered S17−3.  相似文献   

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