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1.
The Cuvierian tubules of Holothuria forskali Della Chiaje, a sea cucumber found in the Adriatic Sea, were investigated with regard to their carbohydrate moieties. From a Pronase digest of these tubules three types of carbohydrate units were isolated and characterized. 1. A high-molecular-weight glycopeptide fraction was shown to contain sulphated polyfucose, galactosamine, a uronic acid and a previously unknown neuraminic acid derivative. The sulphate was shown by i.r. analysis to be present as an O-ester. The carbohydrate unit was linked O-glycosidically to threonine and serine residues in the polypeptide chain. The hitherto unknown neuraminic acid derivative (Hf-neuraminic acid) was resistant to enzymic cleavage by neuraminidase, even after mild alkaline hydrolysis for the removal of O-acyl residues. However, the glycosidic linkage of this compound to the other part of the carbohydrate moiety was readily cleaved by mild acid hydrolysis. Its chromatographic properties distinguished Hf-neuraminic acid from other known neuraminic acid derivatives (N-acetyl-, NO-diacetyl-, NOO-triacetyl- and N-glycollyl-neuraminic acid). Further, this acidic sugar was shown to possess neuraminic acid as its basic structure. Thus, an as yet unknown substituent lends the distinct properties to Hf-neuraminic acid. 2. The carbohydrate composition of a second glycopeptide fraction consisting of a derivative of neuraminic acid, galactose, mannose and glucosamine was similar to that of the well-known carbohydrate groups of the globular glycoproteins. 3. The third fraction contained two glycopeptides containing the disaccharide, glucosylgalactose, which was shown to be linked to the hydroxyl group of hydroxylysine residues of a collagen-like protein. Approximately half of these residues were glycosylated. In addition to these glycopeptides, a small amount of a third glycopeptide that carried only a galactosyl residue was detected. The amino acid sequence of the two major compounds were found to be Gly-Ala-Hyl*-Gly-Ser and Gly-Pro-Hyl*-Gly-Asp, where Hyl* represents a glycosylated amino acid residue.  相似文献   

2.
Glycopeptides are isolated from subtilisin and pronase digests of whole bovine serum transferrin A and D2. The two variants yield glycopeptides with identical amino acid composition. Hence, there is probably no amino acid substitution in this region of the peptide chain. Amino acid sequence determination of one glycopeptide (subtilisin glycopeptide 8) gives the sequence: (CHO)Asn-Ser-Ser-Leu-Cys. This sequence is identical with that of residues 491-495 of the sequence for human serum transferrin (MacGillivray et al., 1982) except that in the bovine transferrin, Asp is replaced by Asn, enabling carbohydrate attachment. A second glycopeptide sequence Arg-(CHO)Asn-Ala-Thr-Tyr is observed, and the significance discussed in relation to carbohydrate moieties of serum glycoproteins.  相似文献   

3.
Short glycopeptides were prepared from bovine colostral κ-casein treated with cyanogen bromide and proteases (pronase P and thermolysin), followed by gel filtrations and ion exchange chromatography. It was confirmed by Edman degradation that glycopeptide I among short glycopeptides obtained was homogeneous. From the effect of alkali treatment, it was assumed that three polysaccharide chains of glycopeptide I were attached to the peptide chain through OH groups of threonines. By chemical procedures and carboxypeptidase P treatment, the amino acid sequence of glycopeptide I was established to be Ser-Gly-Glu-Pro-Thr-Ser-Thr-Pro-Thr-Thr-Glu-Ala-Val. Threonine residues of No. 5, 7 and 9 were bound to the carbohydrate chains through galactosamine. The sugar chain bound to the threonine residue at No. 7 contained glucosamine. Glycopeptide I corresponded to residues of No. 127–139 in κ-casein A from normal milk.  相似文献   

4.
The lipid-free protein residue of rat brain tissue was treated with papain to solubilize the heteropolysaccharide chains of the tissue glycoproteins. The glycopeptides were separated into non-dialyzable and dialyzable glycopeptide preparations. Each preparation was then sorted out into groups of glycopeptides by means of electrophoresis and gel filtration. The quantitatively predominant glycopeptides were the alkali-stable glycopeptides (Group A) which accounted for 64% of the glycopeptide carbohydrate recovered from rat brain. Most of the group A glycopeptides appeared in the non-dialyzable preparation. The molecular weight of the glycopeptides of Group A ranged from approximately 5200–3700. The largest glycopeptide molecule in this mixture possessed the highest electrophoretic mobility and contained one fucose, four N-acetylneuraminic acid (NANA), six N-acetylglucosamine, four galactose, and three mannose residues per molecule. The spectrum of glycopeptides isolated in this group showed a progressive decrease in NANA rsidues, NANA and galactose residues, and NANA, galactose, and N-acetylglucosamine residues which could be correlated with a progressive decline in molecular weight and electrophoretic mobility. Some of the glycopeptides in each fraction recovered from this group of glycopeptides contained sulfate ester groups.A second group of glycopeptides (Group C glycopeptides) accounted for 25% of the total glycoprotein carbohydrate recovered from rat brain. These were recoverd from the dialyzable glycopeptide preparation, and resolved into three fractions by column electrophoresis. These glycopeptides do not contain sulfate, are composed predominately of mannose and N-acetylglucosamine, and possess a molecular weight of approximately 3000.Several minor groups of glycopeptides were detected. Alkali-labile glycopeptides (Group B) appeared in the non-dialyzable glycopeptide preparation. The dialyzable glycopeptide preparation contained glycopeptides (Group E) which contained N-acetylgalactosamine and glucose. These had a molecular weight of approximately 2000. Group D glycopeptides recovered from the dialyzable glycopeptide preparation contained variable amounts of NANA, mannose, galactose, N-acetylglucosamine, and sulfate. These possessed a molecular weight of approximately 2900.  相似文献   

5.
Glycopeptides are isolated from subtilisin and pronase digests of whole bovine serum transferrin A and D2. The two variants yield glycopeptides with identical ami-no acid composition. Hence, there is probably no amino acid substitution in this region of the peptide chain. Amino acid sequence determination of one glycopeptide (subtilisin glycopeptide 8) gives the sequence: (CHO)Asn-Ser-Ser-Leu-Cys. This sequence is identical with that of residues 491–495 of the sequence for human serum transferrin (MacGillivray et al., 1982) except that in the bovine transferrin, Asp is replaced by Asn, enabling carbohydrate attachment. A second glycopeptide sequence Arg-(CHO)Asn-Ala-Thr-Tyr is observed, and the significance discussed in relation to carbohydrate moieties of serum glycoproteins.  相似文献   

6.
Specific fragmentation with cyanogen bromide and subsequent reduction and carboxymethylation of α1-acid glycoprotein, a normal human plasma globulin, permitted isolation of a large fragment which was shown to represent the amino-terminal half and to contain the total carbohydrate moiety of this protein. The amino acid sequences of two large glycopeptides derived from this fragment were established. One glycopeptide was composed of 22 amino acid residues and one carbohydrate unit, and the other consisted of 65 amino acid residues and carried four carbohydrate units.  相似文献   

7.
D K Strickland  B G Hudson 《Biochemistry》1978,17(16):3411-3418
The structure of rabbit transferrin was investigated with regard to number, size, and composition of the heteropolysaccharide units and their relative location on the polypeptide chain. The composition and molecular weight of the Pronase glycopeptides revealed that rabbit transferrin contains two heteropolysaccharide units, each composed of 2 sialic acid residues, 2 galactose residues, 3 mannose residues, and 4-N-acetylglucosamine residues. The composition and molecular weight of the tryptic glycopeptides further substantiated the existence of two identical heteropolysaccharide units and revealed that both units have identical amino acid residues in the immediate vicinity of the carbohydrate attachment sites to the polypeptide chain, suggesting a sequence homology surrounding the two glycosylation sites. Characterization of the cyanogen bromide fragments from rabbit transferrin indicated that both heteropolysaccharide units are located within a single polypeptide fragment representing approximately one-third of the molecule.  相似文献   

8.
D L Blithe  C A Buck  L Warren 《Biochemistry》1980,19(14):3386-3395
Glucosamine-labeled glycopeptides from control and virus-transformed BHK fibroblasts were characterized by size, lectin affinity, charge, and composition. As already demonstrated, on the basis of elution position on a column of Sephadex G-50, transformed cells contained a greater proportion of large glycopeptides than did control cells. Transformed cells also contained a larger proportion of glycopeptides which do not bind to Con A-Sepharose. By sequential chromatography on Sephadex G-50, Con A-Sepharose, and DEAE-Sephadex, approximately 40 individual peaks were partially or completely resolved. If sialic acid was removed from the glycopeptides prior to analysis by ion-exchange chromatography, 95% of the glycopeptides from control cells and 85% of the glycopeptides from transformed cells were no longer bound by DEAE-Sephadex. It was concluded that the DEAE-Sephadex elution properties of the glycopeptides are determined almost entirely by the sialic acid content of the molecules. A comparison of the profiles of control and transformed cell glycopeptides simultaneously eluting from columns of DEAE-Sephadex revealed that the differences between the two cells were largely quantitative; however, the possibility of the existence of qualitative differences as well cannot be excluded. In particular, there was one component present on the surface of transformed cells that was virtually absent in control cells. It was degraded by nitrous acid hydrolysis and heparinase and appeared to be heparan sulfate like material. After fractionation, each isolated glycopeptide population was analyzed for carbohydrate and, in some cases, amino acid content. The apparently larger glycopeptides, group A, the dominant population in transformed cells, were found to contain 3 to 4 mannose residues/glycopeptide when the sugars were normalized to sialic acid content. On the basis of the same criteria, group B glycopeptides contained 4-6 mannose residues/glycopeptide. The carbohydrate and amino acid compositions of the glycopeptides from transformed cells were, with a few exceptions, similar to those from control cells. Some isolated glycopeptides appeared to contain both O-glycosidic anad N-glycosidic linkages on the same oligopeptide.  相似文献   

9.
Mannose-rich glycopeptides derived from brain glycoproteins were recovered by affinity chromatography on Concanavalin A-Sepharose. These glycopeptides, which adsorb to the lectin and are eluted with α-methylmannoside, constitute about 25–30% of the total glycopeptide material recovered from rat brain glycoproteins. They contain predominately mannose and N-acetylglucosamine (mannose/N-acetylglucosamine = 3), as well as small amounts of galactose and fucose. Approx. 65% of the Concanavalin A-binding glycopeptide carbohydrate was recovered after treatment with leucine aminopeptidase, gel filtration on Biogel P-4, and ion-exchange chromatography on coupled Dowex 50-hydrogen and Dowex 1-chrolide columns. The purified glycopeptide fraction contained six mannose and two N-acetylglucosamine residues per aspartic acid and possessed an apparent molecular weight of about 2000 as assessed by gel filtration and amino acid analysis. Galactose and fucose were absent. Treatment of the purified glycopeptides with α-mannosidase drastically reduced their affinity for Concanavalin A, suggesting the presence of one or more terminal mannose residues.  相似文献   

10.
Mannose-rich glycopeptides derived from brain glycoproteins were recovered by affinity chromatography on Concanavalin A-Sepharose. These glycopeptides, which adsorb to the lectin and are eluted with alpha-methylmannoside, constitute about 25--30% of the total glycopeptide material recovered from rat brain glycoproteins. They contain predominately mannose and N-acetylglucosamine (mannose/N-acetylglucosamine = 3), as well as small amounts of galactose and fucose. Approx. 65% of the Concanavalin A-binding glycopeptide carbohydrate was recovered after treatment with leucine aminopeptidase, gel filtration on Biogel P-4, and ion-exchange chromatography on coupled Dowex 50-hydrogen and Dowex 1-chloride columns. The purified glycopeptide fraction contained six mannose and two N-acetylglucosamine residues per aspartic acid and possessed an apparent molecular weight of about 2000 as assessed by gel filtration and amino acid analysis. Galactose and fucose were absent. Treatment of the purified glycopeptides with alpha-mannosidase drastically reduced their affinity for Concanavalin A, suggesting the presence of one or more terminal mannose residues.  相似文献   

11.
The three tryptic glycopeptides from ovine lutropin, in which two were from the α-subunit (α-56 and α-82 glycopeptides) and one from the β-subunit (β-13 glycopeptide), have been isolated and their carbohydrate compositions analyzed. The results indicate that the α-56 glycopeptide has the highest amount of carbohydrate, whereas the β-13 glycopeptide has the least. In general, each of the glycopeptides has similar distribution of various sugars, i.e. high in mannose and glucosamine and low in fucose, sialic acid, galactose and galactosamine. Within the limit of experimental error, the sum of their carbohydrate composition is in agreement with the published data on the intact hormone or separated subunits.  相似文献   

12.
Galactosylhydroxylysine isolated from the alkaline hydrolysate of bovine tracheal cartilage was shown to be O-β-D-galactopyranosylhydroxylysine. The structures of several hydroxylysine-containing glycopeptides suggested the existence of a unique sequence around the glycosylated site with one exception in that an amino acid other than arginine was present in the third position from the glycosylated residue. Isolation of glycopeptides with an identical hexapeptide sequence yet with a different carbohydrate side chain suggested that the attachment of glucose to a polypeptide-bound galactose is not regulated by a short amino acid sequence in the glycopeptide region.  相似文献   

13.
Four components of ovomucoid were digested exhaustively and four kinds of glycopeptide corresponding to the four components were separated by gel filtration. Each glycopeptide was shown to be homogenious by paper chromatography and paper electrophoresis. Molar ratios of carbohydrate components of these glycopeptides varied to some extent but the amino acid compositions of these glycopeptides were essentially identical with each other with the exception of alanine. Aspartic acid and threonine were predominant amino acids in the all glycopeptides. It is most likely that the modes of linkages between polysaccharide and protein in individual ovomucoid I, II, III and IV are essentially the same, and that the carbohydrate moiety is linked to the protein via asparaginyl residue or the hydroxyl group of threonine, although the possibility of the linkages to glutamine and serine can not be excluded.  相似文献   

14.
Identification and determination of the carbohydrate component of Japanese monkey pepsinogens have been performed, and the amino acid sequence around the carbohydrate chain has been investigated. Glycopeptides were prepared by successive digestion of pepsinogens with thermolysin and aminopeptidases. Analyses of their carbohydrate composition by paper and gas-liquid chromatography showed the presence of 4 glucosamine, 6 galactose, 6–8 mannose, and 8–10 fucose residues per molecule of the carbohydrate chain, among which the high content of fucose is especially unique. The amino acid sequence of a major glycopeptide was deduced to be Ile-Gly-Ile-Gly-Thr-Pro-Gln-Ala-Asn, in which the asparagine residue is the site of attachment of the carbohydrate chain.  相似文献   

15.
Purification, composition, and structure of macrophage adhesion molecule   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Macrophage adhesion molecule (MAM) is a surface heterodimer consisting of the trypsin- and plasmin-sensitive glycopeptide gp160 (MAM-alpha) and the glycopeptide gp93 (MAM-beta). MAM, which is the guinea pig analogue of Mo1 and Mac-1, was purified from detergent lysates of peritoneal neutrophils by lentil lectin chromatography and M2-antibody chromatography. The pure heterodimer molecule was dissociated by acidic conditions (pH 3.5), and MAM-alpha and MAM-beta were separated by M7-antibody chromatography. MAM-beta is an approximately 640 amino acid residue polypeptide with exceptionally high cysteine content. At 7.2 residues per 100 amino acids, Cys/2 of MAM-beta is more than 3 times the mean for 200 purified proteins. Reactivity with six beta-subunit-specific monoclonal antibodies recognizing at least four epitopes demonstrated that intrapeptide disulfide bonds are required to maintain the structure of MAM-beta. All six antibodies failed to react when MAM-beta was treated with reducing agents. MAM-beta is 18% carbohydrate; the major monosaccharides are mannose, N-acetylglucosamine, galactose, and sialic acid. MAM-beta is estimated to contain five to six N-linked carbohydrate units. MAM-alpha is an approximately 1100-residue polypeptide with lower Cys/2 content (2.0 residues per 100 amino acid residues). MAM-alpha is 21% carbohydrate. The major monosaccharides are mannose, N-acetylglucosamine, galactose, and sialic acid; the mannose content is higher in MAM-alpha than MAM-beta. MAM-alpha is estimated to contain 12 N-linked carbohydrate units.  相似文献   

16.
Reduced polypeptide subunits of α-, β- and γ-conglutins from Lupinus angustifolius seeds were resolved by preparative SDS gel electrophoresis of the fluorescent labelled proteins, into four, six and two major components, respectively. All subunits were glycosylated, to varying degrees, containing mannose, galactose and glucosamine. The major glycopeptides released by pronase digestion of each conglutin had similar galactose/mannose ratios; the MW of the glycopeptide released from α- and β-conglutin was ca 5000. Although on average, each molecule of α-conglutin contains one main oligosaccharide chain, and β-conglutin two, the presence of carbohydrate in all polypeptide subunits suggests that some subunits may arise by proteolytic cleavage of a larger polypeptide after glycosylation. The presence of minor glycopeptide components indicates that modification of carbohydrate chains during seed development may also occur.  相似文献   

17.
Two populations of tryptic peptides were isolated from bovine estrus cervical mucin (BCM). One contained all the carbohydrate, and was rich in threonine and serine. These glycopeptides had, like the whole mucin, alanine as their NH2-terminal residues. Their COOH-terminal residues were arginine. The second population of peptides was rich in carboxylic amino acids, contained two cysteinyl residues, and had, like the whole mucin, leucine as COOH-terminal residues. Their NH2-terminal residues were aspartic acid. The sum of the residues of one glycopeptide plus one cysteinyl-containing peptide corresponded to the number of residues constituting a putative subunit of BCM. The amino acid sequence of the major cysteinyl peptide was determined. A cluster of hydrophobic residues was found in the COOH-terminal region. The amino acid sequences of two of the glycopeptides were found identical up to the 22nd residue. The small number of tryptic peptides, as well as the large amount of NH2- and COOH-terminal amino acids found in BCM indicate that this glycoprotein is made up of similar subunits with a molecular weight of about 22,000, one of the glycopeptides representing the NH2-terminal part, and one of the cysteinyl peptides, the COOH-terminal part. However, the existence of these subunits was not confirmed by ultracentrifugation of BCM in dithiothreitol and sodium dodecyl sulfate. BCM was polydisperse and had a mean molecular weight of 507,000.  相似文献   

18.
1. Glycopeptides were isolated by gel filtration on Sephadex G-25 and Sephadex G-50 from a Pronase digest of porcine thyroglobulin. 2. Isolated glycopeptides were separated into five main fractions on a column of DEAE-Sephadex A-25. Of these fractions I to III were further purified by SE-Sephadex C-25 or DEAE-Sephadex A-25 column chromatography. Several of the purified glycopeptides were homogeneous on paper electrophoresis. 3. Based on the chemical composition and molecular weight of the fractionated glycopeptides, two distinct types of heterosaccharide chain were demonstrated. 4. One type of the heterosaccharide unit consisted of four to eight residues of mannose and two residues of glucosamine and had a molecular weight of 1000-1700. The other type of unit contained sialic acid, fucose and galactose in addition to mannose and glucosamine and had a molecular weight of about 3600. 5. Mild alkaline treatment of the glycopeptide did not result in the destruction of threonine and serine. 2-Acetamido-1-N-(4-l-aspartyl)-2-deoxy-beta-d-glucopyranosylamine was isolated from partial acid hydrolysates.  相似文献   

19.
The glycoprotein which accounts for approximately 50% of the protein and all of the nonlipid carbohydrate of the cell envelope of Halobacterium salinarium (Mescher, M. F., Strominger, J. L., and Watson S. W. (1974) J. Bacteriol. 120, 945-954) has been purified and partially characterized. The glycoprotein has an apparent molecular weight of 200,000, is extremely acidic, and has a carbohydrate content of approximately 10 to 12%. The carbohydrate included neutral hexoses, amino sugar, and uronic acid. Information regarding the number, composition, and mode of attachment of the carbohydrate chains was obtained by isolation and examination of the glycopeptides derived from degradation of cell envelope protein with trypsin and pronase. Trypsin digestion resulted in two glycopeptides. One of these was large (approximately 55,000 daltons) and had most of the neutral hexose linked to it. The carbohydrate moieties consisted of di- and trisaccharides of glucosylgalactose and (uronic acid, glucose)-galactose attached via O-glycosidic linkages between galactose and threonine. The other tryptic glycopeptide had a relatively large heterosaccharide attached to it via an alkaline-stable linkage. The heterosaccharide contained 1 glucose, 8 to 9 galactose, 1 mannose, and 10 to 11 glucosamine residues, and approximately 6 residues of an unidentified amino augar. The alkaline stability of the linkage and the amino acid composition of glycopeptides resulting from Pronase digestion of the tryptic glycopeptide showed that the heterosaccharide was attached to an asparagine residue, presumably via an N-glycosylamine bond to the amide group. The intact glycoprotein has a single N-linked heterosaccharide, 22 to 24 O-linked disaccharides, and 12 to 14 O-linked trisaccharides per molecule. N- and O-glycosidic linkages are the most common carbohydrate-protein linkages in mammalian glycoproteins but, to our knowledge, this is the first report of either type of linkage in a prokaryotic cell envelope protein.  相似文献   

20.
UDP-D-galactose: 2-acetamido-2-deoxy-beta-D-glucopyranosyl 4-beta-D-galactosyltransferase (GalTase) activity was purified, from primary chick embryo fibroblast (CEF) transformed by a temperature-sensitive, Rous sarcoma virus mutant (CEF-RSV), by chromatography on an affinity resin prepared with monoclonal antibodies to GalTase. Cellular glycopeptides from CEF, as well as CEF-RSV, maintained at permissive (37 degrees) [CEF-RSF (37 degrees)] and nonpermissive temperatures (41 degrees) [CEF-RSV (41 degrees)], were solubilized and galactosylated in vitro by incubation with purified GalTase substrates, composed of at least six discrete complex glycopeptides having bi- to tetra-antennary structures. The glycopeptides isolated from transformed cells, CEF-RSV (37 degrees), included the six types observed in nontransformed cells, but demonstrated alterations in their relative amounts, including an increase in the content of a glycopeptide containing 3 mannose and 4 glucosamine residues. Furthermore, two additional complex-type glycopeptides were isolated from CEF- but demonstrated alterations in their relative amounts, including an increase in the content of a glycopeptide containing 3 mannose and 4 glucosamine residues. Furthermore, two additional complex type glycopeptides were isolated from CEF-RSV (37 degrees). These malignant transformation-related glycopeptides were partially characterized and found to represent tri- and tetra-antennary complex glycopeptides. Endogenous galactosylation appeared to have occurred in a branched, nonspecific manner in these transformed cell-derived glycopeptides. These findings indicate that transformed cells may contain a greater preponderance of more highly branched, complex oligosaccharides which are randomly galactosylated at nonreducing termini by cellular GalTase.  相似文献   

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