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1.
The alkali extractable and water-soluble cell wall polysaccharides F1SS from Aspergillus wentii and Chaetosartorya chrysella have been studied by methylation analysis, 1D- and 2D-NMR, and MALDI-TOF analysis. Their structures are almost identical, corresponding to the following repeating unit: [→ 3)-β-D-Galf-(1 → 5)-β-D-Galf-(1 →] n → mannan core. The structure of this galactofuranose side chain differs from that found in the pathogenic fungus Aspergillus fumigatus, in other Aspergillii and members of Trichocomaceae: [→ 5)-β-D-Galf-(1 →] n → mannan core. The mannan cores have also been investigated, and are constituted by a (1 → 6)-α-mannan backbone, substituted at positions 2 by chains from 1 to 7 residues of (1 → 2) linked α-mannopyranoses. Published in 2004. This revised version was published online in July 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

2.
The structure of a cell wall alkali-extractable and water-soluble polysaccharide isolated from two species of Arachniotus has been established by reductive cleavage and NMR spectroscopy. The linear polysaccharide consists of a regular disaccharide-repeating unit with the structure: [-->6)-beta-D-Galf-(1-->5)-beta-D-Galf-(1-->](n)-->mannan core.  相似文献   

3.
The alkali-extractable water-soluble polysaccharides F1SS isolated from the cell wall of four species of Discula destructiva have been studied by methylation analysis and NMR spectroscopy, and their idealized structures established as [structure: see text] where n approximately 2 for strains CBS 109771 and CBS 133.91, n approximately 1 for CBS 132.91, and it has an intermediate value in strain CBS 130.91. The mannan core was obtained by mild hydrolysis of the F1SS polysaccharide and its structure consisted of a skeleton of alpha-(1-->6)-mannopyranan, with around one out of eleven residues substituted at C-2 by short chains (one to six units) of 2-substituted mannopyranoses.  相似文献   

4.
1,6-alpha-D-Mannosidase from Aspergillus phoenicis was purified by anion-exchange chromatography, chromatofocussing and size-exclusion chromatography. The apparent molecular weight was 74 kDa by SDS-PAGE and 81 kDa by native-PAGE. The isoelectric point was 4.6. 1,6-alpha-D-Mannosidase had a temperature optimum of 60 degrees C, a pH optimum of 4.0-4.5, a K(m) of 14 mM with alpha-D-Manp-(1-->6)-D-Manp as substrate. It was strongly inhibited by Mn(2+) and did not need Ca(2+) or any other metal cofactor of those tested. The enzyme cleaves specifically (1-->6)-linked mannobiose and has no activity towards any other linkages, p-nitrophenyl-alpha-D-mannopyranoside or baker's yeast mannan. 1,3(1,6)-alpha-D-Mannosidase from A. phoenicis was purified by anion-exchange chromatography, chromatofocussing and size-exclusion chromatography. The apparent molecular weight was 97 kDa by SDS-PAGE and 110 kDa by native-PAGE. The 1,3(1,6)-alpha-D-mannosidase enzyme existed as two charge isomers or isoforms. The isoelectric points of these were 4.3 and 4.8 by isoelectric focussing. It cleaves alpha-D-Manp-(1-->3)-D-Manp 10 times faster than alpha-D-Manp-(1-->6)-D-Manp, has very low activity towards p-nitrophenyl-alpha-D-mannopyranoside and baker's yeast mannan, and no activity towards alpha-D-Manp-(1-->2)-D-Manp. The activity towards (1-->3)-linked mannobiose is strongly activated by 1mM Ca(2+) and inhibited by 10mM EDTA, while (1-->6)-activity is unaffected, indicating that the two activities may be associated with different polypeptides. It is also possible that one polypeptide may have two active sites catalysing distinct activities.  相似文献   

5.
Two galactofuranomannans, Ths-4 and Ths-5, were isolated from the lichen, Thamnolia vermicularis var. subuliformis, using ethanol fractionation and anion-exchange and size-exclusion chromatography. The average molecular weights of Ths-4 and Ths-5 were estimated to be 19 and 200 kDa, respectively. Structural characterisation of Ths-4, Ths-5 and their partially hydrolysed derivatives was performed by methanolysis and methylation analysis. The intact and partially hydrolysed Ths-4 was further analysed using NMR spectroscopy (1D, COSY, NOESY, TOCSY, HSQC and HMBC). According to the data obtained, the heteroglycans Ths-4 and Ths-5 have similar structures, but have large differences in molecular weight. The structure is composed of 3-O-linked and 5-O-linked galactofuranosyl chains linked to a mannan core. The mannan core consists of a main chain of alpha-(1-->6)-linked mannopyranosyl residues, substituted at O-2 with either a single alpha-mannopyranosyl unit or an alpha-Manp-(1-->2)-alpha-Manp-(1-->2)-alpha-Manp group in the ratio of approximately 1:3, respectively. The polysaccharides have idealised repeating blocks as is shown.  相似文献   

6.
The structure of acidic fungal polysaccharides isolated from the cell wall of Plectosphaerella cucumerina, Verticillium dahliae, and V. albo-atrum has been investigated by chemical analysis, methylation analysis, and 1D and 2D 1H and 13C NMR spectroscopy. The polysaccharides have an idealized repeating block of the type: [carbohydrates: see text] linked to a small mannan core (<15%), where n=13, m=13, p=5, and q=8 for P. cucumerina, and n=16, m=16, p=6, and q <1 for both Verticillium species.  相似文献   

7.
The structures of the hydrophilic parietal and cellular arabinomannans isolated from Mycobacterium bovis BCG cell wall [Nigou et al. (1997) J Biol Chem 272: 23094-103] were investigated. Their molecular mass as determined by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry was around 16 kDa. Concerning cap structure, capillary electrophoresis analysis demonstrated that dimannoside (Manpalpha1-->2Manp) was the most abundant motif (65-75%). Using two-dimensional 1H-13C NMR spectroscopy, the mannan core was unambiguously demonstrated to be composed of -->6Manpalpha1--> backbone substituted at some O-2 by a single Manp unit. The branching degree was determined as 84%. Finally, arabinomannans were found to be devoid of the phosphatidyl-myo-inositol anchor and, by aminonaphthalene disulfonate tagging, the mannan core was shown to contain a reducing end. This constitutes the main difference between arabinomannans and lipoarabinomannans from Mycobacterium bovis BCG.  相似文献   

8.
Fungal glycosylinositolphosphoceramides (GIPCs) are involved in cell growth and fungal-host interactions. In this study, six GIPCs from the mycelium of the human pathogen Aspergillus fumigatus were purified and characterized using Q-TOF mass spectrometry and 1H, 13C, and 31P NMR. All structures have the same inositolphosphoceramide moiety with the presence of a C(18:0)-phytosphingosine conjugated to a 2-hydroxylated saturated fatty acid (2-hydroxy-lignoceric acid). The carbohydrate moiety defines two types of GIPC. The first, a mannosylated zwitterionic glycosphingolipid contains a glucosamine residue linked in alpha1-2 to an inositol ring that has been described in only two other fungal pathogens. The second type of GIPC presents an alpha-Manp-(1-->3)-alpha-Manp-(1-->2)-IPC common core. A galactofuranose residue is found in four GIPC structures, mainly at the terminal position via a beta1-2 linkage. Interestingly, this galactofuranose residue could be substituted by a choline-phosphate group, as observed only in the GIPC of Acremonium sp., a plant pathogen.  相似文献   

9.
A beta-D-xylosidase with molecular mass of 250+/-5 kDa consisting of two identical subunits was purified to homogeneity from a cultural filtrate of Aspergillus sp. The enzyme manifested high transglycosylation activity in transxylosylation with p-nitrophenyl beta-D-xylopyranoside (PNP-X) as substrate, resulting in regio- and stereoselective synthesis of p-nitrophenyl (PNP) beta-(1-->4)-D-xylooligosaccharides with dp 2-7. All transfer products were isolated from the reaction mixtures by HPLC and their structures established by electrospray mass spectrometry and 1H and 13C NMR spectroscopy. The glycosides synthesised, beta-Xyl-1-->(4-beta-Xyl-1-->)(n)4-beta-Xyl-OC6H4NO2-p (n=1-5), were tested as chromogenic substrates for family 10 beta-xylanase from Aspergillus orizae (XynA) and family 11 beta-xylanase I from Trichoderma reesei (XynT) by reversed-phase HPLC and UV-spectroscopy techniques. The action pattern of XynA against the foregoing PNP beta-(1-->4)-D-xylooligosaccharides differed from that of XynT in that the latter released PNP mainly from short PNP xylosides (dp 2-3) while the former liberated PNP from the entire set of substrates synthesised.  相似文献   

10.
The marine fungus Aspergillus terreus produces an extracellular polysaccharide, YSS, when grown in potato dextrose-agar medium. YSS was isolated from the fermented liquids using ethanol precipitation, anion-exchange and size-exclusion chromatography. YSS was mainly composed of mannose and galactose in a molar ratio of 7.68:1.00, its average molecular weight was estimated to be about 18.6 kDa. On the basis of chemical and spectroscopic analyses, including one- and two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance (1D and 2D NMR) spectroscopy, structure of YSS may be represented, at an average, as a backbone of mannan with two types of branches. The mannan backbone is mainly composed of (1→2)-linked α-mannopyranose with small amounts of (1→6)-linked α-mannopyranose residues. The branches consist of terminal β-galactofuranose residues, and disaccharide units of (1→6)-linked α-mannopyranose. The branches are linked to C-6 of (1→2)-linked α-mannopyranose residues of backbone. The antioxidant activity of YSS was evaluated with the scavenging abilities on 1,1-diphenyl-2-picrylhydrazyl (DPPH), superoxide and hydroxyl radicals in vitro, and the results indicated that YSS had good antioxidant activity, especially scavenging ability on DPPH radicals. The investigation demonstrated that YSS is a novel branched galactomannan with antioxidant activity, and differs from previously described extracellular polysaccharides.  相似文献   

11.
Aspergillus nidulans is a well-established nonpathogenic laboratory model for the opportunistic mycopathogen, A. fumigatus. Some recent studies have focused on possible functional roles of glycosphingolipids (GSLs) in these fungi. It has been demonstrated that biosynthesis of glycosylinositol phosphorylceramides (GIPCs) is required for normal cell cycle progression and polarized growth in A. nidulans (Cheng, J., T.-S. Park, A. S. Fischl, and X. S. Ye. 2001. Mol. Cell Biol. 21: 6198-6209); however, the structures of A. nidulans GIPCs were not addressed in that study, nor were the functional significance of individual structural variants and the downstream steps in their biosynthesis. To initiate such studies, acidic GSL components (designated An-2, -3, and -5) were isolated from A. nidulans and subjected to structural characterization by a combination of one-dimensional (1-D) and 2-D NMR spectroscopy, electrospray ionization-mass spectrometry (ESI-MS), ESI-MS/collision-induced decomposition-MS (MS/CID-MS), ESI-pseudo-[CID-MS]2, and gas chromatography-MS methods. All three were determined to be GIPCs, with mannose as the only monosaccharide present in the headgroup glycans; An-2 and An-3 were identified as di- and trimannosyl inositol phosphorylceramides (IPCs) with the structures Man alpha 1-->3Man alpha 1-->2Ins1-P-1Cer and Man alpha 1-->3(Man alpha 1-->6)Man alpha 1-->2Ins1-P-1Cer, respectively (where Ins = myo-inositol, P = phosphodiester, and Cer = ceramide). An-5 was partially characterized, and is proposed to be a pentamannosyl IPC, based on the trimannosyl core structure of An-3.  相似文献   

12.
O-linked oligosaccharide groups ranging from di- to hexasaccharide were beta-eliminated by mild alkaline treatment under reducting conditions from the peptidogalactomannan of Aspergillus fumigatus mycelial cell wall. The resulting reduced oligosaccharides, which were the minor components of the peptidogalactomannan fraction, were fractionated to homogeneity by successive gel filtration and high-performance liquid chromatography. Their primary structures were determined based on a combination of techniques including gas chromatography, ESI-QTOF-MS, 1H COSY and TOCSY, and 1H-13C HMQC NMR spectroscopy and methylation analysis, to be: alpha-Glcp-(1 --> 6)-Man-ol, beta-Galf-(1 --> 6)-alpha-Manp-(1 --> 6)-Man-ol, beta-Galf-(1 --> 5)-beta-Galf-(1 --> 6)-alpha-Manp-(1 --> 6)-Man-ol and beta-Galf-(1 --> 5)-[beta-Galf-(1 --> 5]3-beta-Galf-(1 --> 6)-Man-ol. The beta-Galf containing oligosaccharides have not been previously described as fungal O-linked oligosaccharides. The peptidogalactomannan is antigenic and was recognized by human sera of patients with aspergillosis when probed by ELISA, but de-O-glycosylation rendered a 50% decrease in its reactivity. Furthermore, when tested in a hapten inhibition test, the isolated oligosaccharide alditols were able to block, on a dose-response basis, recognition between human sera and the intact peptidogalactomannan. The immunodominant epitopes were present in the tetra- and hexasaccharide, which contain a beta-Galf-(1 --> 5)-beta-Galf terminal group. These results suggest that the O-glycosidically linked oligosaccharide chains, despite being the less abundant carbohydrate component of the A. fumigatus peptidogalactomannan, may account for a significant part of its antigenicity, other than the known activity associated with the galactomannan component.  相似文献   

13.
Conformational analyses of the branched repeating unit of the O-antigenic polysaccharide of Shigella dysenteriae type 2 have been performed with molecular mechanics MM3. A filtered systematic search on the trisaccharide alpha-D-GalNAc-(1-->3)-[alpha-D-GlcNAc-(1-->4)]-alpha-D-GalNAc forming the branch, shows essentially a single favored conformation. Also, the downstream alpha-D-GalNAc-(1-->4)-alpha-D-Glc linkage is sterically constrained. The alpha-D-Glc-(1-->4)-beta-D-Gal moiety, however, forms a more flexible link region between the branch points, and shows a 90 degrees bend similar to what is known for the galabiose moiety occurring in globo-glycolipids. The calculations indicate that consecutive repeating units in their minimum energy conformation arrange in a helical structure with three repeating units per turn. This helix is very compact and appears to be stabilized by hydrophobic interactions involving the N-acetyl groups at the branch points. Random conformational search suggests the existence of another helical structure with four repeating units per turn. It appears possible that the alpha-D-Glc-(1-->4)-beta-D-Gal moiety, which is exposed on the surface of the helical structures, can evade recognition by the immune system of the host by the mimicry of globo structures.  相似文献   

14.
The syntheses of three trisaccharides: alpha-Neu5Ac-(2 --> 3)-beta-D-Gal-(1 --> 4)-beta-D-GlcNAc --> OMe, alpha-Neu5Ac-(2 --> 3)-beta-D-Gal6SO3Na-(1 --> 4)-beta-D-GlcNAc --> OMe, and alpha-Neu5Ac-(2 --> 3)-beta-D-Gal-(1 --> 3)-alpha-D-GalNAc --> OBn were accomplished by using either methyl (phenyl 5-acetamido-4,7,8,9-tetra-O-acetyl-3,5-dideoxy-2-thio-beta-D-glycero-D-g alacto-2-nonulopyranoside)onate or methyl (phenyl N-acetyl-5-acetamido-4,7,8,9-tetra-O-acetyl-3,5-dideoxy-2-thio-beta-D-gl ycero-D-galacto-2-nonulopyranoside)onate as the sialyl donor. The N,N-diacetylamino sialyl donor appears to be more reactive than its parent acetamido sugar when allowed to react with an disaccharide acceptor under the same glycosylation conditions. The trisaccharides, as well as the intermediate products, were fully characterized by 2D DQF 1H-1H COSY and 2D ROESY spectroscopy.  相似文献   

15.
We here report the lipopolysaccharide (LPS) structures expressed by nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae R2846, a strain whose complete genome sequence has recently been obtained. Results were obtained by using NMR techniques and ESI-MS on O-deacylated LPS and core oligosaccharide material (OS) as well as ESI-MS (n) on permethylated dephosphorylated OS. A beta- d-Glc p-(1-->4)- d-alpha- d-Hep p-(1-->6)-beta- d-Glc p-(1-->4) unit was found linked to the proximal heptose (HepI) of the conserved triheptosyl inner-core moiety, l-alpha- d-Hep p-(1-->2)-[ PEtn-->6]- l-alpha- d-Hep p-(1-->3)- l-alpha- d-Hep p-(1-->5)-[ PPEtn-->4]-alpha-Kdo-(2-->6)-lipid A. The beta- d-Glc p (GlcI) linked to HepI was also branched with oligosaccharide extensions from O-4 and O-6. O-4 of GlcI was substituted with sialyllacto- N-neotetraose [alpha-Neu5Ac-(2-->3)-beta- d-Gal p-(1-->4)-beta- d-Glc pNAc-(1-->3)-beta- d-Gal p-(1-->4)-beta- d-Glc p-(1-->] and the related structure [( PEtn-->6)-alpha- d-Gal pNAc-(1-->6)-beta- d-Gal p-(1-->4)-beta- d-Glc pNAc-(1-->3)-beta- d-Gal p-(1-->4)-beta- d-Glc p-(1-->]. The distal heptose (HepIII) was substituted at O-2 by beta- d-Gal. Phosphate, phosphoethanolamine, phosphocholine, acetate, and glycine were found to substitute the core oligosaccharide. Two heptosyltransferase genes, losB1 and losB2, have been identified from the R2846 genome sequence and are candidates to add the noncore heptose to the LPS. Mutant strain R2846 losB1 did not show dd-heptose in the extension from HepI but still contained minor quantities of ld-heptose at the same position, indicating that the losB1 gene is required to add dd-heptose to GlcI. The LPS from strain R2846 losB1/ losB2 expressed no noncore heptose, consistent with losB2 directing the addition of ld-heptose.  相似文献   

16.
We have recently demonstrated that the cell wall beta-glucan of Candida albicans could be solubilized by sodium hypochlorite, followed by dimethylsulfoxide-extraction (NaClO-DMSO method). In this study, applying this method to Aspergillus spp., we prepared mycelial cell wall beta-glucan and examined its physical properties and immunotoxicological activity. The acetone-dried mycelia of Aspergillus spp. were oxidized by the NaClO-DMSO method. An analysis of (13)C NMR spectra revealed the preparations to be composed of alpha-(1 --> 3) and beta-(1 --> 3)-D-glucan. Also, the proportion of alpha-(1 --> 3) and beta-(1 --> 3)-D-glucan varied. Furthermore, a solubilized Aspergillus beta-glucan (ASBG) was prepared from OX-Asp by urea-autoclave treatment. ASBG showed limulus activity similar to Candida solubilized beta-glucan (CSBG), and there was little difference in the activity of ASBG between various Aspergillus spp. ASBG affected the production of IL-8 by human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC). ASBG should be useful for analyzing the clinical role of beta-glucan.  相似文献   

17.
A series of mixed-ligand neutral nickel(II) complexes of the general formula [Ni(i-MNT)(2a-5mt)2] (1), [Ni(i-MNT)(2a-2tzn)2] (2) and [Ni(i-MNT)(Im)2] (3), [where i-MNT2? = the dianion of 1,1-dicyano-2,2-ethylenedithiolate, 2a-5mt = 2-amino-5-methyl thiazole, 2a-2tzn = 2-amino-2-thiazoline and Im = imidazole] were prepared and characterized with elemental analyses, spectroscopic (IR, UV–vis) methods, magnetic susceptibility, molar conductivity and cyclic voltammetry measurements. The magnetic data, the electronic spectra and the electrical conductivity measurements indicated mononuclear neutral complexes with square-planar geometry. The X-ray analysis of [Ni(i-MNT)(2a-5mt)2] shows the nickel atom being fourfold coordinated with the two sulfur atoms of the dithiolate (i-MNT) ligand and the endocyclic nitrogen atoms from the two 2a-5mt ring giving rise to a slightly distorted square-planar arrangement. The cyclic voltammograms of the complexes have been recorded and the corresponding redox potentials have been estimated. The DNA-binding studies of the complexes has been evaluated by examining their ability to bind to calf-thymus DNA (CT DNA) with UV spectroscopy and cyclic voltammetry. Both studies have shown that the complexes can bind to CT-DNA by the intercalative and the electrostatic binding mode. Competitive binding studies with ethidium bromide (EB) with fluorescence spectroscopy have also shown that the complexes exhibit the ability to displace the DNA-bound EB indicating that they can bind to DNA in strong competition with EB.  相似文献   

18.
Galactomannan is a characteristic polysaccharide of the human filamentous fungal pathogen Aspergillus fumigatus that can be used to diagnose invasive aspergillosis. In this study, we report the isolation of a galactomannan fraction associated to membrane preparations from A. fumigatus mycelium by a lipid anchor. Specific chemical and enzymatic degradations and mass spectrometry analysis showed that the lipid anchor is a glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI). The lipid part is an inositol phosphoceramide containing mainly C18-phytosphingosine and monohydroxylated lignoceric acid (2OH-C(24:0) fatty acid). GPI glycan is a tetramannose structure linked to a glucosamine residue: Manalpha1-2Manalpha1-2Manalpha1-6Manalpha1-4GlcN. The galactomannan polymer is linked to the GPI structure through the mannan chain. The GPI structure is a type 1, closely related to the one previously described for the GPI-anchored proteins of A. fumigatus. This is the first time that a fungal polysaccharide is shown to be GPI-anchored.  相似文献   

19.
Acetyl and propionyl group substituted thiadiazole derivatives (4a-4h, 5a-5h, 6a, 6b, 7a and 7b) have been synthesized by the cyclization of 2,4-diaryl-3-azabicyclo[3.3.1]nonan-9-one thiosemicarbazones (2a-2h, 3a and 3b) with acetic anhydride/propionic anhydride and were characterized by Elemental analysis, IR, (1)H NMR and (13)C NMR spectral analysis. Single crystal X-ray diffraction has also been recorded for compounds 4c and 5a. From the NMR and Single crystal X-ray diffraction analysis, compounds 4b-4d, 4f-4h, 5b, 5c, 5f-5h, 6a, 7a and 7b were found to adopt twin-chair conformations whereas compounds 4a, 4e, 5a, 5d, 5e and 6b adopt chair and boat conformation of cyclohexane and piperidine rings, respectively. Besides, the synthesized compounds were screened for antibacterial and antifungal activities using serial dilution method. The microbiological analysis showed that the electron withdrawing function substituted phenyl group at C-2 and C-4 of azabicyclononane based thiadiazoles 4c/4h and 5c/5h exposed significant antimicrobial activity against Salmonella typhi, Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Aspergillus flavus, Aspergillus niger and Candida albicans at MIC of 6.25 μg/ml.  相似文献   

20.
The hot water soluble green coffee arabinogalactans, representing nearly 7% of total coffee bean arabinogalactans, were characterized by (1)H and (13)C NMR and, after partial acid hydrolysis, by ESI-MS/MS. Data obtained showed that these are highly branched type II arabinogalactans covalently linked to proteins (AGP), with a protein moiety containing 10% of 4-hydroxyproline residues. They possess a beta-(1-->3)-Galp/beta-(1-->3,6)-Galp ratio of 0.80, with a sugars composition of Rha:Ara:Gal of 0.25:1.0:1.5, and containing 2mol% of glucuronic acid residues. Beyond the occurrence of single alpha-L-Araf residues and [alpha-L-Araf-(1-->5)-alpha-L-Araf-(1-->] disaccharide residues as side chains, these AGPs contain unusual side chains at O-3 position of the beta-(1-->6)-linked galactopyranosyl residues composed by [alpha-L-Rhap-(1-->5)-alpha-L-Araf-(1-->] and [alpha-L-Rhap-(1-->5)-alpha-L-Araf-(1-->5)-alpha-L-Araf-(1-->] oligosaccharides. Rhamnoarabinosyl and rhamnoarabinoarabinosyl side chains are reported for the first time as structural features of plant arabinogalactan-proteins.  相似文献   

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