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1.
Incubation of a membrane fraction from Saccharomyces cerevisiae with UDP-N-acetyl [14C] glucosamine catalyzes the tranfer of N-acetylglucosamine to an endeenous lipid fraction as well as a methanol-insoluble polymer. The glycolipid was shown to separate into three compounds by thin-layer chromatography. The biosynthesis of two of them could clearly be stimulated by the addition of dolichol monophosphate to the incubation mixture. Evidence is presented that the substances are dolichol pyrophosphate derivatives: dolichol pyrophosphate N-acetylglucosamine and dolichol pyrophosphate di-N-acetylchitobiose. The formation of the chitobiose-containing lipid was increased by reincubation of the glycolipid with non-radioactive UDP-N-acetylglucosamine.The same particulate preparation transferred mannose from GDPmannose to dolichol pyrophosphate di-N-acetylchitobiose, giving rise to a lipid-bound oligosaccharide. Molecular weight determination of the oligosaccharide moiety gave a value of 780, which is consistent with a tetrasaccharide containing two mannose subunits attached to di-N-acetylchitobiose.The methanol-insoluble radioactive product obtained in the presence of UDP-N-acetyl[14C]glucosamine was transformed by pronase treatment to a large extent into dialyzable material. It is suggested that the glycolipids described serve as intermediates in the glycosylation of yeast mannoproteins.  相似文献   

2.
A crude membrane preparation from Phaseolus aureus hypocotyls catalyzes the incorporation of mannose from GDP-[14C]mannose into a acid labile glycolipid and a methanol insoluble fraction. Addition of dolichyl monophosphate to the incubation mixture stimulated the formation of both the mannolipid and the methanol insoluble endproduct. Thin-layer chromatography of endogenous lipid and of the stimulated lipid fraction revealed that both compounds run identical. Ficaprenyl monophosphate also stimulates the incorporation of mannose; however, the ficaprenyl monophosphate mannose formed is not identical to the endogenous mannolipid. This suggests that the endogenous acceptor has the properties of an α-saturated polyprenyl monophosphate rather than those of the ficaprenyl phosphate type. The same membrane preparation also incorporates N-acetylglucosamine into an acid labile glyolipid as well as into a polymer fraction. Evidence is presented that the N-acetylglucosamine containing lipid consists of a mixture of dolichyl pyrophosphate N-acetylglucosamine and dolichyl pyrophosphate di-N-acetylchitobiose. It seems likely that the two compounds have a precursor-product relationship. Incubation of dolichyl pyrophosphate di-N-acetylchitobiose together with GDP-mannose gives rise to lipid-bound mannosyl-di-N-acetylchitobiose. Radioactivity from either the [14C]mannolipid or the N-acetyl[14C]glucosamine containing lipid is incorporated into a methanol insoluble product to 3.4 and 6.3%, respectively; it seems, at least in part, to be a glycoprotein.  相似文献   

3.
Pea membranes supplied with GDP-[14C]mannose, UDP-N-[14C]acetylglucosamine or UDP-[14C]glucose catalyze the transfer of 14C-labeled sugars or sugar phosphates to endogenous lipid acceptors as well as to exogenously added dolichyl phosphates. Fully unsaturated polyprenyl phosphates were not used as effective acceptors by this system. Mannosyl-P-dolichol was formed most rapidly in the presence of long-chained dolichyl-P while mannosyl-PP-, glucosyl-PP- and GlcNAc-PP-dolichol were preferentially formed from relatively short-chained dolichyl phosphate acceptors. Glucosyl-PP- and mannosyl-PP-dolichol accumulated in the preparation without further metabolism, but GlcNAc-PP-dolichol was lengthened by addition of a second GlcNAc plus several [14C]mannose units to form an oligosaccharide fraction susceptible to the action of endoglycosidase H. This lipid-linked oligosaccharide could then be glycosylated in the presence of UDP-[14C]glucose to form a longer oligosaccharide. It is concluded that levels of endogenous dolichyl phosphates in pea membranes are rate-limiting for several of the key glycosyltransferases required for oligosaccharide assembly.  相似文献   

4.
An axolemma-enriched membrane fraction prepared by an improved procedure from bovine white matter catalyzes the enzymatic transfer of [14C]mannose and N-acetyl[14C]glucosamine from their nucleotide derivatives into a mannolipid and an N-acetylglucosaminyl lipid in the presence of exogenous dolichyl monophosphate. The labeled glycolipid products have the chemical and chromatographic characteristics of mannosylphosphoryldolichol and N-acetylglucosaminylpyrophosphoryldolichol. The initial rates of synthesis of the glycolipids by the axolemma-enriched membrane fraction have been compared with the initial rates of glycolipid formation catalyzed by a microsomal preparation and myelin in the presence or absence of dolichyl monophosphate. Essentially no glycolipid synthesis was observed when either GDP-[14C]mannose or UDP-N-acetyl[14C]glucosamine were incubated with myelin in the presence or absence of exogenous dolichyl monophosphate. A comparison of the initial rates of synthesis of the glycolipids using endogenous acceptor lipid revealed that the rate of formation of mannolipid was 7 times faster for the microsomal membranes than the axolemma-enriched membranes. In the presence of an amount of dolichyl monophosphate approaching saturation the initial rate of glycolipid synthesis was markedly enhanced for both membrane preparations. However, due to a more dramatic enhancement in the axolemma-enriched membranes the initial rate of mannolipid synthesis was only approx. 2.5 times greater in the microsomal membranes. A similar observation was made when the initial rates of N-acetylglucosaminyl lipid synthesis were compared for axolemma-enriched and microsomal preparations in the presence and absence of exogenous dolichyl monophosphate. These studies indicate that the axolemma-enriched membranes have a relatively lower content of dolichyl monophosphate than the microsomal membranes although the difference in the amount of mannosyltransferase is only two to three-fold lower. The presence of a sugar nucleotide pyrophosphatase activity capable of degrading GDP-mannose and UDP-N-acetylglucosamine has also been demonstrated in the axolemma-enriched membrane fraction.  相似文献   

5.
In the endosperm of Ricinus communis (castor bean) a number of glycosyl transferases were found to be present during germination. They catalyze the incorporation of mannose from guanosine diphosphate mannose and of N-acetylglucosamine from uridine diphosphate N-acetylglucosamine into a glycolipid fraction, which had all of the properties of dolichylphosphate and pyrophosphate sugars, respectively. The sugar moiety of dolichylphosphate mannose is transferred to a lipid-oligosaccharide, containing more than 6 hexose units. When the membranes are preincubated with nonradioactive guanosine diphosphate mannose and uridine diphosphate N-acetylglucosamine, radioactivity from dolichylphosphate [14C]mannose is also transferred to a glycopolymer. In addition, the formation of radioactive glycoproteins from guanosine diphosphate [14C]mannose has been demonstrated using a combination of sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and autofluorography.  相似文献   

6.
Microsomal preparations from rat adipose tissue catalyse the transfer of [14C]mannose from GDP-[14C]mannose to an endogenous acceptor forming a [14C]mannosyl lipid. The mannosyl lipid co-chromatographs with hen oviduct dolichyl monophosphate β-mannose on three solvent systems. It is stable to mild alkaline hydrolysis, but strong alkaline treatment yields a compound that co-migrates with mannose 1-phosphate. The mannosyl lipid is labile to mild acid hydrolysis, yielding [14C]mannose. Formation of the compound is reversible by GDP, but not GMP, and is stimulated by exogenous dolichyl phosphate.

The kinetics of transfer of [14C]mannose from GDP-[14C]mannose to form dolichyl monophosphate mannose were studied by using preparations derived from rats fed on one of four diets: G (high glucose), L (high lard), F (fructose) or GC (high glucose, 0.9% cholesterol). The Km and Vmax. values for transfer from GDP-mannose were virtually indistinguishable in the four preparations.

In the absence of exogenous dolichyl phosphate, the largest amount of transfer of [14C]mannose into the mannosyl lipid was observed with preparations from fructose-fed animals. Preparations from glucose-fed animals showed about 60% as much transfer, whereas membranes from rats fed the other diets showed intermediate values between the fructose- and glucose-fed animals. The inclusion of cholesterol in the glucose diet elicited an increase in transfer of mannose.

Under conditions of saturating exogenous dolichyl phosphate, preparations from lard-fed animals have 1.5 times as much enzyme activity as do preparations from animals fed the other three diets.

  相似文献   

7.
Particulate membrane fractions from Volvox carteri catalyze the transfer of mannose from GDP-mannose to dolichyl diphosphate-[14C]chitobiose to form lipid-linked oligosaccharides up to a dolichyl diphospnate-chitobiose-(mannose)5 structure. Mannosylation of the chitobiosyl lipid requires divalent cations and detergents as solubilizing agents. Depending on the nature of the detergent, the oligosaccharide pattern differs markedly: With deoxycholate or the zwitterionic detergent 314 a lipid-linked trisaccharide accumulates. The nonionic Triton X-100, however, gives rise to a spectrum of compounds up to a heptasaccharide. Enzyme digestion of the tri- and pentasaccharide structure, obtained after mild acid hydrolysis of the corresponding [14C]glycolipids, revealed that the first mannose is bound via a β-glycosidic linkage to the chitobiosyl core, whereas the outer mannose residues are linked as α-mannosides. Our studies indicate that, in agreement with recent findings in other organisms, the innermost α-mannosidic residues are donated directly from GDP-mannose. The structure of oligosaccharides synthesized by Volvox membranes is thus consistent with results from other eucaryotic species, suggesting a common pathway of N-glycosylation of glycoproteins.  相似文献   

8.
Summary The subcellular localization and characterization of some of the components involved in the glycosylation of asparagine type glycoproteins was attempted using dolichyl diphosphate [14c]mannose oligosaccharide as precursor of the glycosylation reaction in vitro. Isolated rough and smooth microsomel fractions were able to carry out the transfer of the carbohydrate moiety from lipid oligosaccharide to endogenous protein acceptors. The protein glycosylating activity remained practically the same after stripping the vesicles from their ribosomes or partially releasing their vesicular content. Isolation of polysomes from rough microsomes after glycosylation has taken place, reveals that a large proportion of mannose labeled glycoproteins is in the membranous fraction. The remaining labeled glycoproteins co-sediment with the polysomal fraction. If the isolation is carried out before glycosylation only the membranous fraction shows enzyme activity, whereas the polysomes alone are not able to carry out glycosylation. All these results taken together indicate that the protein glycosylating enzyme is a structural component of the rough and smooth microsomes of rat liver.  相似文献   

9.
A comparison has been made of the enzymes catalyzing the transfer of manose, glucose and N-acetylglucosamine from, respectively, GDPmannose, UDP-glucose and UDP-N-acetylglucosamine to endogenous dolichol phosphate (Dol-P) in liver Golgi membranes. Evidence is presented which suggests that all three reactions utilize the same pool of Dol-P. The transfer of mannose from GDP-Man to Dol-P is not inhibited by 0.1 mM UDP or UMP; 0.1 mM GDP did block the accumulation of mannose in Dol-P-Man. The net transfer of glucose and N-acetylglucosamine to Dol-P is prevented by 0.1 mM UDP but not 0.1 mM GDP. UDPglucose inhibits the reverse of the glucose transfer reaction but not reverse of the N-acetylglucosamine or mannose transfer reaction. On the basis of this, and other data, it is concluded that the three sugar transfer reactions utilize separate enzymes.  相似文献   

10.
A crude membrane preparation of the unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardii was found to catalyse the incorporation of D-[14C]mannose from GDP-D-[14C]-mannose into a chloroform/methanol-soluble compound and into a trichloroacetic acid-insoluble polymer fraction. The labelled lipid revealed the chemical and chromatographic properties of a short-chain (about C55-C65) alpha-saturated polyprenyl mannosyl monophosphate. In the presence of detergent both long-chain (C85-C105) dolichol phosphate and alpha-unsaturated undecaprenyl phosphate (C55) were found to be effective as exogenous acceptors of D-mannose from GDP-D-[14C]mannose to yield their corresponding labelled polyprenyl mannosyl phosphates. Exogenous dolichyl phosphate stimulated the incorporation of mannose from GDP-D-[14C]mannose into the polymer fraction 5-7-fold, whereas the mannose moiety from undecaprenyl mannosyl phosphate was not further transferred. Authentic dolichyl phosphate [3H]mannose and partially purified mannolipid formed from GDP-[14C]mannose and exogenous dolichyl phosphate were found to function as direct mannosyl donors for the synthesis of labelled mannoproteins. These results clearly indicate the existence of dolichol-type glycolipids and their role as intermediates in transglycosylation reactions of this algal system. Both the saturation of the alpha-isoprene unit and the length of the polyprenyl chain may be regarded as evolutionary markers.  相似文献   

11.
White matter membrane preparations from pig brain catalyze the transfer of [14C]mannose from exogenous [14C]mannosylphosphoryldolichol into an endogenous oligosaccharide lipid. Under the same incubation conditions label is also incorporated into endogenous membrane glycoproteins. The enzymatic labeling of both classes of endogenous acceptors is stimulated by the addition of Ca2+. Several enzymatic properties of the mannosyltransferase activity responsible for the transfer of mannose from mannosylphosphoryldolichol into the oligosaccharide lipid intermediate have been examined. The [Man-14C] oligosaccharide lipid synthesized by this in vitro system has the solubility, hydrolytic and chromatographic characteristics of a pyrophosphate-linked oligosaccharide derivative of dolichol. The free [Man-14C]oligosaccharide liberated from the carrier lipid by mild acid treatment is estimated to contain 8 glycose units. All of the [14C]mannosyl units in the [Man-14C]oligosaccharide derived from exogenous [14C]mannosylphosphoryldolichol are released as free [14C]mannose by an α-mannosi-dase. No [14C]mannose is released during incubation with a β-mannosidase. The presence of an N,N′-diacetylchitobiose unit at the reducing end of the lipid-bound [Man-14C]oligosaccharide is indicated by its susceptibility to digestion by endo-β-N-acetylglucosaminidase H. Pronase digestion of the enzymatically labeled [Man-14C]glycoprotein yields a single [Man-14C]gly-copeptide fraction on Bio-Gel P-6 that appears to be slightly larger than the free [Man-14C]oligosac-charide released from the carrier lipid by mild acid hydrolysis. The [Man-14C]glycopeptide is cleaved by endo-β-N-acetylglucosaminidase H, and the neutral [Man-14C]oligosaccharide product appears to be identical to the product formed when the lipid-bound [Man-14C]oligosaccharide is degraded by the endoglycosidase. The glycopeptide linkage in the [Man-14C]glycoprotein is stable to mild alkali treatment. These results are consistent with the dolichol-linked [Man-14C]oligosaccharide, mannosy-lated via exogenous [14C]mannosylphosphoryldoiichol, being subsequently transferred en bloc from dolichyl pyrophosphate to asparagine residues in endogenous membrane polypeptide acceptors. SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the [Man-14C]glycoprotein, labeled when white matter membranes are incubated with [14C]mannosylphosphoryldolichol. revealed a major labeled polypeptide with an apparent mol wt of 24,000. A minor labeled membrane glycoprotein is also seen, having an apparent mol wt of 105,000.  相似文献   

12.
This is the first report not only on the presence of polyprenyl phosphates and their site of synthesis in algae, but also on the formation of their sugar derivatives in this system.

A glucose acceptor lipid was isolated from the nonphotosynthetic alga Prototheca zopfii. The lipid was acidic and resistant to mild acid and alkaline treatments. The glucosylated lipid was labile to mild acid hydrolysis and resistant to phenol treatment and catalytic hydrogenation, as dolichyl phosphate glucose is. These results are consistent with the properties of an α-saturated polyprenyl phosphate.

The polyprenylic nature of the lipid was confirmed by biosynthesis from radioactive mevalonate. The [14C]lipid had the same chromatographic properties as dolichyl phosphate in DEAE-cellulose and Sephadex LH-20. Strong alkaline treatment and enzymic hydrolysis liberated free alcohols with chain lengths ranging from C90 to C105, C95 and C100 being the most abundant molecular forms. The glucose acceptor activity of the biosynthesized polyprenyl phosphate was confirmed.

The ability of different subcellular fractions to synthesize dolichyl phosphate was studied. Mitochondria and the Golgi apparatus were the sites of dolichyl phosphate synthesis from mevalonate.

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13.
Microsomal preparations from malignant human breast tumors catalyzed the transfer of mannose and glucose from GDP-[14C]-Man and UDP-[14C]-Glc into lipid-linked sugars and glycoprotein-like substances. As judged by several criteria the obtained lipid-linked monosaccharides behaved as dolichyl phosphate mannose and dolichyl phosphate glucose whereas lipid-linked oligosaccharides behaved as polyprenyl diphosphate derivatives. The optimum conditions for mannosyl- and glucosyl-transfer reactions and the effect of dolichyl phosphate, detergent and EDTA on incubation mixture were described.  相似文献   

14.
Primary structural requirements both for N- and O-glycosylation have been studied using a series of synthetic peptides and a membrane fraction from Saccharomyces cerevisiae. N-Glycosylation: the tripeptide sequence Asn-Xaa-Thr/Ser was found to be necessary for the transfer of saccharide units from oligosaccharide-lipid to asparagine. Substitution of asparagine by aspartic acid or glutamine, or replacement of threonine by valine in the hexapeptide Tyr-Asn-Leu-Thr-Ser-Val prevents its glycosylation. Also, a proline residue in the position of Xaa makes the peptide unable to function as an acceptor. Transfer onto asparagine occurs only efficiently if both the α-amino group of asparagine and the α-carboxyl moiety of the hydroxy amino acid are blocked. Yield of glycosylation improves with increasing peptide chain length. With regard to the glycosyl donor dolichyl diphosphate-bound GlcNAc2Man9Glc3 is the preferred substrate. Non-glucosylated glycolipid Dol-PP-GlcNAc2Man9 is a poor donor, whereas smaller precursors Dol-PP-GlcNAc2 and Dol-PP-GlcNAc2Man1 allow reasonable transfer. O-Glycosylation: no marker sequence can be derived for the formation of an O-glycosidic linkage via Dol-P-Man. Introduction of a proline residue in vicinity to the hydroxy amino acid leads to a significant improvement of glycosyl transfer. It is postulated that accessibility of potential O-glycosylation sites rather than a specific sequence may be a prerequisite for O-glycosylation.  相似文献   

15.
The initial rate of dolichyl phosphate mannose biosynthesis was measured in white-matter membranes from pig brain at various ages from before birth throughout the period of most rapid brain development. Dolichyl phosphate mannose synthase activity increased from prenatal values to a maximum in 3 week-old animals, and gradually decreased to adult values after 8 weeks of age. The nature of the developmental change was investigated by enzymic and biochemical comparisons of the membrane preparations from the most active age (3 weeks) and adult controls. The specific activity of dolichyl phosphate mannose synthase in preparations from actively myelinating animals was approx. 3-fold higher than adults when mannolipid formation was assayed with saturating concentrations of GDP-[14C]mannose and utilizing only endogenous acceptor lipid. No major variations were found in the apparent Km values for GDP-mannose or exogenous dolichyl monophosphate. However, the ratio of dolichyl phosphate mannose synthase activity for myelinating animals/adult animals decreased significantly when large amounts of exogenous dolichyl monophosphate were added to the incubation mixtures. Dolichyl phosphate mannose synthase activity was also compared in white-matter membranes depleted of endogenous dolichyl monophosphate by enzymic mannosylation or treatment with butanol. When these preparations were assayed with identical amounts of exogenous dolichyl monophosphate, the dolichyl monophosphate-depleted membranes from actively myelinating animals contained only 20–30% more dolichyl phosphate mannose synthase activity. Overall, these studies strongly suggest that the developmental change in dolichyl phosphate mannose synthase activity is due primarily to the presence of a relatively lower amount of endogenous dolichyl monophosphate being accessible to the mannosyltransferase in the white-matter membranes from adult animals.  相似文献   

16.
Hamster liver post-nuclear membranes catalyze the transfer of mannose from GDP-mannose to endogenous dolichyl phosphate and to a second major endogenous acidic lipid. This mannolipid was believed to be synthesized from endogenous retinyl phosphate and was tentatively identified as retinyl phosphate mannose (Ret-P-Man) (De Luca, L. M., Brugh, M. R. Silverman-Jones, C. S. and Shidoji, Y. (1982) Biochem. J. 208, 159-170). To characterize this endogenous mannolipid in more detail, we isolated and purified the mannolipid from incubations containing hamster liver membranes and GDP-[14C]mannose and compared its properties to those of authentic Ret-P-Man. We found that the endogenous mannolipid was separable from authentic Ret-P-Man on a Mono Q anion exchange column, did not exhibit the absorbance spectrum characteristic of a retinol moiety, and was stable to mild acid under conditions which cleave authentic Ret-P-Man. The endogenous mannolipid was sensitive to mild base hydrolysis and mannose was released from the mannolipid by snake venom phosphodiesterase digestion. These properties were consistent with the endogenous acceptor being phosphatidic acid. Addition of exogenous phosphatidic acid, but not phospholipids with a head group blocking the phosphate moiety, to incubations containing hamster liver membranes and GDP-[14C]mannose resulted in the synthesis of a mannolipid with chromatographic and physical properties identical to the endogenous mannolipid. A double-labeled mannolipid was synthesized in incubations containing hamster liver membranes, GDP-[14C]mannose, and [3H]phosphatidic acid. Mannosyl transfer to exogenous phosphatidic acid was saturable with increasing concentrations of phosphatidic acid and GDP-mannose and specific for glycosyl transfer from GDP-mannose. Class E Thy-1-negative mutant mouse lymphoma cell membranes, which are defective in dolichyl phosphate mannose synthesis, also fail to transfer mannose from GDP-mannose to exogenous phosphatidic acid or retinyl phosphate. Amphomycin, an inhibitor of dolichyl phosphate mannose synthesis, blocked mannosyl transfer to the endogenous lipid, and to exogenous retinyl phosphate and phosphatidic acid. We conclude that the same mannosyltransferase responsible for dolichyl phosphate mannose synthesis can also utilize in vitro exogenous retinyl phosphate and phosphatidic acid as well as endogenous phosphatidic acid as mannosyl acceptors.  相似文献   

17.
Calf pancreas microsomes incorporated radioactive D-mannose from GDP-D-[14C]mannose into lipid-bound oligosaccharides extracted with chloroform/methanol/water (10/10/2.5, v/v). Several products, which probably differed in the size of the oligosaccharide moiety, were labeled. These could be partially resolved by thin layer chromatography and DEAE-cellulose chromatography. The labeled lipid-bound oligosaccharides were retained on DEAE-cellulose more strongly than synthetic dolichyl alpha-D-[14C]mannopyranosyl phosphate. They were stable to mild alkali, but labile to acid and hot alkali. Acid treatment yielded a neutral 14C-labeled oligosaccharide fraction which was estimated by gel filtration to have a minimum of 8 monosaccharide residues. Hot alkali treatment yielded a mixture of neutral and acidic 14C-labeled oligosaccharides which could be transformed into neutral products by alkaline phosphatase. The D-[14C]mannose residues were alpha-linked at the nonreducing terminus of the oligosaccharides since they could be removed completely with alpha-mannosidase. Most of the D-[14C]mannose-labeled oligosaccharides were retained on concanavalin A Sepharose and eluted with methyl alpha-D-mannopyranoside. Pancreatic dolichyl beta-D-[14C]mannopyranosyl phosphate incubated with calf pancreas microsomes in the presence of sodium taurocholate was efficiently utilized as donor of alpha-D-mannosyl residues in lipid-bound oligosaccharides. The products formed from dolichyl beta-D-[14C]mannopyranosyl phosphate were identical with those formed from GDP-D-[14C]mannose, and evidence was obtained to show that the dolichyl beta-D-[14C]mannopyranosyl phosphate was serving as donor without prior conversion to GDP-D-[14C]mannose. Transfer of mannose from dolichyl beta-D-[14C]mannopyranosyl phosphate to lipid-bound oligosaccharides took place at a pH optimum of 7.3, whereas transfer to the precipitate containing glycoproteins was greatest at pH 6.0 in Tris/maleate buffer. The addition of divalent cation was not required, but low concentrations of EDTA were extremely inhibitory. The carbohydrate composition of the lipid-bound oligosaccharides of microsomal membranes was investigated by gas-liquid chromatography and by reduction with sodium borotritide. A heterogeneous mixture of oligosaccharides containing N-acetyl-D-glucosamine, D-mannose, and D-glucose varying in proportions from approximately 1/2.5/0.5 to 1/5/1.5 was obtained with glucosamine at the reducing end. Acid treatment of the lipid-bound oligosaccharide fraction yielded dolichyl pyrophosphate, suggesting that at least some of the oligosaccharides were linked to dolichol through a pyrophosphate group.  相似文献   

18.
Summary Microsome enriched Ceratitis capitata extracts synthesized a glucosylated lipid linked oligosaccharide. Its properties were closely related to those of the previously described insect mannosylated dolichyl diphosphate oligosaccharides and almost the same as those of the rat liver dolichyl-diphosphate-(GlcNAc)2-(Man)9-(Glc)1–3. The saccharide moiety of, the latter was transferred to an unknown endogenous protein-like acceptor by the fly extracts. These represent the first evidence of a protein glycosylation in a pluricellular invertebrate through dolichyl derivatives.Abbreviations Dol-P dolichyl phosphate - Dol-P-P dolichyl diphosphate  相似文献   

19.
Incubating white matter membranes with UDP-N-acetyl-[14C]glucosamine in the presence of Mg2+ and AMP resulted in the labeling of two major glycolipids, a minor glycolipid and several membrane-associated glycoproteins. The addition of AMP protected the labeled sugar nucleotide from degradation by a membrane-bound sugar nucleotide pyrophosphatase activity. While no labeled oligosaccharide lipid was recovered in a CHCl3CH3OHH2O (10:10:3) extract after incubating with only UDP-N-acetyl-[14C] glucosamine, Mg2+, and AMP, the inclusion of unlabeled GDP-mannose led to the formation of an N-acetyl-[14C]glucosamine-labeled oligosaccharide lipid that was soluble in CHCl3CH3OHH2O (10:10:3). The [GlcNAc-14C]oligosaccharide unit was released by treatment with 0.1 N HCl in 80% tetrahydrofuran at 50 °C for 30 min and appears to have the same molecular size as the lipid-linked [mannose-14C] oligosaccharide, formed enzymatically by white matter membranes as judged by their elution behavior on Bio-Gel P-6. The incorporation of N-acetyl-[14C]glucosamine into glycolipid was stimulated by exogenous dolichol monophosphate, but inhibited by UMP or tunicamycin, a glucosamine-containing antibiotic. Although UMP and tunicamycin drastically inhibited the labeling of glycolipid, these compounds had very little effect on the labeling of glycoproteins. The major glycolipids have the chemical and Chromatographic characteristics of N-acetylglucosaminylpyrophosphoryldolichol and N,N′-diacetylchitobiosylpyrophosphoryldolichol. When the labeled glycoproteins were analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, four labeled polypeptides were observed, having apparent molecular weights of 145,000, 105,000, 54,000, and 35,000. Virtually all of the N-acetyl-[14C]glucosamine was released when the labeled glycopeptides, produced by pronase digestion, were incubated with an exo-β-N-acetylglucosaminidase, indicating that all of the N-acetyl-[14C]glucosamine incorporated under these conditions is attached to white matter membrane glycoproteins at nonreducing termini.  相似文献   

20.
Cell-free enzyme particles from mung beans (Phaseolus aureus) or cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) fibers catalyze the incorporation of mannose from GDP-[14C]mannose and N-acetylglucosamine from UDP-[3H]-N-acetylglucosamine into polyprenyl-type lipids. These lipids have been synthesized and purified and the lipid moieties compared to each other as well as to dolichyl phosphate and to lipids isolated from similar mannoseand N-acetylglucosamine-containing lipids from liver and aorta.

The following lines of evidence indicate that in plants, the lipid carrier for N-acetylglucosamine is different from the lipid carrier for mannose: [List: see text]

We propose that the apparent difference in the lipid carrier for these two sugars may be a point of control of glycoprotein synthesis.

  相似文献   

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