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1.
The demonstration of a precursor-product relationship in the course of GM1 and GD1a biosynthesis is described in the present paper. We injected rats with GM2 gangliosides [GalNAc beta 1----4(NeuAc alpha 2----3)Gal beta 1----4Glc beta 1----1'Cer] of brain origin, which were isotopically radiolabeled on the GalNAc ([GalNAc-3H]GM2) or sphingosine ([Sph-3H]GM2) residue. We then compared the time-courses of GM1 and GD1a biosynthesis in the liver after the administration of each radiolabeled GM2 derivative. After the administration of [GalNAc-3H]GM2, GM1, and GD1a were both present as doublets, that could be easily resolved on TLC. The lower spot of each doublet was identified as a species having the typical rat brain ceramide moiety and represented gangliosides formed through direct glycosylation of the injected GM2. The upper spot of each doublet was identified as a species having the typical rat liver ceramide moiety and represented gangliosides formed through recycling of the [3H]GalNAc residue, released during ganglioside catabolism. After the administration of [Sph-3H]GM2, only ganglioside with the rat brain ceramide moiety were found, that represented the sum of ganglioside formed through direct glycosylation and those formed through recycling of some sphingosine-containing fragments. In each case, the time-course of GM1 and GD1a biosynthesis exhibited a precursor-product relationship. The curve obtained from the direct glycosylation showed a timing delay with respect to those obtained from recycling of GM2 fragments. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that the sequential addition of activated sugars to a sphingolipid precursor is a dissociative process, catalyzed by physically independent enzymatic activities.  相似文献   

2.
The metabolization of exogenous GM1 in normal human fibroblasts at a subcellular level is investigated in the present paper. For this a GM1 ganglioside, radiolabelled on the sphingosine moiety, was given to the cells and all the formed metabolites analyzed, in a time-course study, in enriched fractions of lysosomes, plasma membrane and microsomes. After feeding the cells, the radioactivity incorporation was relevant in the enriched lysosomal and plasma membrane subfractions whereas it was modest in the enriched microsomal fraction. The kinetic curves obtained for each enriched fraction, following a 3-day chase period, suggested a translocation of exogenous GM1 from the plasma membrane to the lysosomal apparatus and, of GM1 itself together with its metabolites, to the Golgi or endoplasmic reticulum and finally again to the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

3.
In order to assess metabolic recycling of sialic acid, GM1 ganglioside [nomenclature of Svennerholm (1964) J. Lipid. Res. 5, 145-155; IUPAC-IUB Recommendations (1977) Lipids 12, 455-468], 14C-radiolabelled at the acetyl group of sialic acid, was intravenously injected into Wistar rats, and the presence of radioactive sialic acid in liver sialoglycolipids (gangliosides) and sialoglycoproteins was ascertained. A time-course study (20 min-72 h) showed that the radioactivity present in the liver distributed in the following fractions, with reciprocal proportion varying with time: the protein (glycoprotein) fraction, the ganglioside fraction and the diffusible fraction, which contained low-Mr compounds, including sialic acid. Ganglioside-linked radioactivity gradually decreased with time; protein-linked radioactivity appeared soon after injection (20 min), reached a maximum around 20 h, then slowly diminished; diffusible radioactivity provided a sharp peak at 4 h, then rapidly decreased till disappearing after 40 h. The behaviour of bound radioactivity in the individual liver gangliosides was as follows: (a) rapid diminution with time in GM1, although with a lower rate at the longer times after injection; (b) early appearance (20 min) with a peak at 1 h, followed by continuous diminution, in GM2; (c) early appearance (20 min), peak at 1 h, diminution till 4 h, followed by a plateau, in GM3; (d) appearance at 60 min, maximum around 40 h and slow diminution thereafter, in GD1a, GD1b and GT1b. A detailed study, accomplished at 40 h after injection, demonstrated that almost all radioactivity present in the protein fraction was released by mild acid treatment and recovered in purified sialic acid; most of radioactive glycoprotein-bound sialic acid was releasable by sialidase action. In addition, the radioactivity present in the different gangliosides was exclusively carried by sialic acid and present in both sialidase-resistant and sialidase-labile residues. Only in the case of GD1a was the specific radioactivity of sialidase-resistant sialic acid superior to that of sialidase-releasable sialic acid. The results obtained lead to the following conclusions: (a) radioactive GM3 and GM2 were produced by degradation of GM1 taken up; GM3 originated partly by a process of neosynthesis; (b) radioactive GM1 consisted in part of residual exogenous GM1 and in part of a neosynthetized product; (c) radioactive GD1a originated in part by direct sialylation of GM1 taken up and in part by a neosynthetic process; (d) radioactive GD1b and GT1b resulted only from neosynthesis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
A metabolic recycling of N-acetylgalactosamine (GalNAc), liberated from exogenous GM2 ganglioside [nomenclature of Svennerholm (1964) J. Lipid Res. 5, 145-155; IUPAC-IUB recommendations (1977) Lipids 12, 455-468], is demonstrated in rat liver. After the injection of a GM2 ganglioside isotopically radiolabelled on the terminal GalNAc residue ([GalNAc-3H]GM2), the liver retained a large amount of radioactivity distributed among: (1) a glycoprotein/glycosaminoglycan fraction, (2) a ganglioside fraction; and (3) a free-sugar fraction. Furthermore, volatile radioactivity was also found. The relative incorporation in the above fractions was time-dependent. The glycoprotein/glycosaminoglycan fraction contained radioactivity that was located on the GalNAc and GlcNAc residues. The ganglioside fraction was composed of two main families: gangliosides formed by a recycling of the liberated GalNAc, and gangliosides derived by direct utilization of the administered GM2. The free-sugar fraction contained mainly GalNAc. We suggest that GalNAc, after being released in the course of intra-lysosomal ganglioside catabolism, crosses the lysosomal membrane and passes into the cytosol, where the part not degraded is re-utilized for the biosynthesis of the different glycoconjugate classes.  相似文献   

5.
(Glyco)sphingolipids (GSL) are believed to protect the cell against harmful environmental factors by increasing the rigidity of plasma membrane. Marked decrease of membrane fluidity in cholestatic hepatocytes was described but the role of GSL therein has not been investigated so far. In this study, localization in hepatocytes of a representative of GSL, the GM1 ganglioside, was compared between of rats with cholestasis induced by 17α-ethinylestradiol (EE) and vehicle propanediol treated or untreated animals. GM1 was monitored by histochemical reaction employing cholera toxin B-subunit. Our findings in normal rat liver tissue showed that GM1 was localized in sinusoidal and canalicular hepatocyte membranes in both peripheral and intermediate zones of the hepatic lobules, and was nearly absent in central zones. On the contrary, in EE-treated animals GM1 was also expressed in central lobular zones. Moreover, detailed densitometry analysis at high magnification showed greater difference of GM1 expression between sinusoidal surface areas and areas of adjacent cytoplasm, caused as well by increased sinusoidal staining in central lobular zone as by decreased staining in cytoplasm in peripheral zone. These differences correlated with serum bile acids as documented by linear regression analyses. Both GM1 content and mRNA corresponding to GM1-synthase remained unchanged in livers; the enhanced expression of GM1 at sinusoidal membrane thus seems to be due to re-distribution of cellular GM1 at limited biosynthesis and could be responsible for protection of hepatocytes against harmful effects of bile acids accumulated during cholestasis.  相似文献   

6.
Ganglioside GM2, 3H-labeled in the sphingoid base, was added to the culture medium of normal and GM2 gangliosidosis fibroblasts. Ganglioside was found to adsorb rapidly to the cell surface, most of it could however be removed by trypsination. The trypsin-resistant incorporation was about 10 nmol/mg cell protein, after 48 h. The rates of adsorption and incorporation depended strongly on the concentration of fetal calf serum in the medium, higher serum concentrations being inhibitory. After various incubation times, the lipids were extracted, separated by thin-layer chromatography and visualized by fluorography. In normal cells a variety of degradation products as well as sphingomyelin was found whereas in GM2 gangliosidosis cells, only trace amounts of such products (mainly GA2) were found. In contrast, the higher gangliosides GM1 and GD1a were formed in comparable amounts (2.2-3.6% of total radioactivity after 92 h) in normal and pathologic cell lines. Supplementation of cells from GM2 gangliosidosis, variant AB, with purified GM2-activator protein restored ganglioside GM2 degradation to almost normal rates but had no effect on its glycosylation to gangliosides GM1 and GD1a. From these results we conclude that the synthesis of higher gangliosides from incorporated GM2 can occur by direct glycosylation and not only via lysosomal degradation and resynthesis from [3H]sphinganine-containing degradation products. Preliminary studies with subcellular fractionation after various times of [3H]ganglioside incorporation indicated biphasic kinetics for the net transport of membrane-inserted ganglioside to lysosomes, compatible with the notion that a portion of the glycolipids can also escape from secondary lysosomes and migrate to Golgi compartment or cell surface.  相似文献   

7.
Incorporation and metabolism of exogenous GM3 in human myelogenous leukemia HL-60 cells were analyzed using 3H-labeled GM3 ([3H]GM3). [3H]GM3 was rapidly internalized into the cells (trypsin-resistant fraction) 8 times more than the control, 3H-labeled GM1 ([3H]GM1). In addition, not only incorporation but also metabolism of [3H]GM3 was more rapid than [3H]GM1 in HL-60 cells. Moreover, one of the metabolites was found to co-migrate with ceramide in thin-layer chromatography analysis and ceramide formation from exogenous GM3 is more rapid than that from exogenous GM1. These results suggested that there would be some preferential mechanism to produce ceramide from differentiation-inducible GM3 in HL-60 cells rather than from non-inducing GM1.  相似文献   

8.
Cholera toxin (CT) covalently linked to horseradish peroxidase (HRP) is a specific cytochemical marker for its receptor, the monosialoganglioside GM1. The binding and endocytosis of exogenous [3H]GM1 by cultured murine neuroblastoma cells (line 2A [CCl-131] ), which contain predominantly GM3, was examined by quantitative electron microscope autoradiography. The relationship between exogenous receptor, [3H]GM1, and CT HRP was studied in double labeling experiments consisting of autoradiographic demonstration of [3H]GM1 and cytochemical visualization of HRP. Exogenous [3H]GM1 was not degraded after its endocytosis by cells for 2 h at 37 degrees C. Quantitative studies showed similar grain density distributions in cells treated with [3H]GM1 alone and in cells treated with [3H]GM1 followed by CT-HRP. Qualitative studies conducted in double labeling experiments showed autoradiographic grains over the peroxidase-stained plasma membrane, lysosomes, and vesicles at the trans aspect of the Golgi apparatus. The findings indicate that exogenous glycolipid is associated with the plasmid membrane of deficient cells and undergoes endocytosis. The quantitative ultra-structural autoradiographic studies are consistent with the hypothesis that the spontaneous endocytosis of exogenous [3H]GM1 controls the subsequent uptake of CT-HRP.  相似文献   

9.
Since exogenous gangliosides are known to promote neuritogenesis, the incorporation of exogenous GM1 into neuroblastoma membranes was examined. Neuro-2A cells, synchronized in the G1/G0 phase, were suspended in HEPES buffered saline containing 10–4 M [3H]GM1, and membrane incorporation was measured as radioactivity remaining with the cell pellet following incubation with serum-containing medium and trypsin. Calcium ion (0.01 to 10 mM) reduced incorporation of exogenous GM1, due to its interaction with GM1 micelles in solution. When cells were treated with proteases prior to incubation with GM1, the inhibitory effect of Ca2+ was lost and total incorporation into membranes was lowered by approximately one order of magnitude. Pretreatment of cells with 0.05% trypsin resulted in an inhibition of GM1 incorporation within 5 minutes. When trypsinized cells were resuspended in complete growth medium, the cells recovered the ability to incorporate GM1 with time, and this paralleled labeling of cellular protein with [3H]leucine. The role of membrane protein in the incorporation of exogenous GM1 could not be explained by the lytic release of cytosolic transfer proteins nor the artifactual coating of the cell surface by serum proteins. These results suggest that the incorporation of exogenous gangliosides into cellular membrane lipid bilayers cannot be fully explained by considerations of lipophilicity alone, and leads us to propose that initial recognition by membrane protein(s) is necessary.Abbreviations used GM1 H3NeuAc-GgOse4Cer - HBS HEPES buffered saline - DMEM Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium - FCS fetal calf serum  相似文献   

10.
The multiplicity of bovine liver acid beta-galactosidase was investigated. Acid beta-galactosidase activity was measured in the presence of glucono-delta-lactone, which inhibited the neutral beta-galactosidase activity but not the acid beta-galactosidase activity in bovine liver. Three forms of acid beta-galactosidase were separated by Sephadex G-200 gel filtration and the elution pattern of the 4-methylumbelliferyl-beta-galactosidase activity coincided with that of the GM1-beta-galactosidase activity. These forms were relatively stable under acidic conditions (pH 4.5), but the two high molecular weight forms were inclined to dissociate into the low molecular weight form under neutral conditions (pH 7.0). The three forms of the enzyme showed similar pH-optima and apparent Michaelis constants for GM1 ganglioside.  相似文献   

11.
The uptake and degradation of GM1 ganglioside (GM1) and asialoGM1 ganglioside (GA1) were studied in cultured fibroblasts from normal individuals and patients with beta-galactosidase deficiency, using the lipid-loading test. The glycolipids were incorporated from the media into the fibroblasts and the terminal galactose was hydrolyzed in normal cells. The hydrolysis rates of GA1 were 80-86% of normal on the 3rd day after loading, while GM1 was hydrolyzed slowly; 35-54% on the 14th day. In infantile GM1 gangliosidosis and I-cell disease, little GM1 and GA1 was hydrolyzed on any day of culture, while fibroblasts from patients with adult GM1 gangliosidosis, Morquio disease type B and galactosialidosis hydrolyzed the lipids at nearly normal rates. The intracellular accumulation of the glycolipids, on the basis of protein content, was abnormally high in the case of infantile GM1 gangliosidosis and I-cell disease, but normal in the other disorders examined. These observations indicate that the in situ metabolism of GM1 and GA1 is probably normal in fibroblasts from patients with adult GM1 gangliosidosis, Morquio disease type B and galactosialidosis, although in vitro beta-galactosidase activities in these disorders are very low. The results are compatible with findings that GM1 and GA1 do not accumulate in the somatic organs of patients with adult GM1 gangliosidosis and galactosialidosis. In I-cell disease, however, the results of the loading test did not agree with the finding that there is little accumulation of glycolipids in postmortem tissues.  相似文献   

12.
The disposition of labelled [3H]GM1lactone, the inner ester of ganglioside GM1, was studied in the rat. After i.v. administration [3H]GM1lactone was quickly converted to its corresponding open form most likely by plasma esterases, and then displayed a pharmacokinetic profile identical to [3H]GM1. Following intramuscular administration of [3H]GM1lactone [3H]GM1 levels in plasma and in tissues were higher than those obtained after the administration of an equivalent dose of [3H]GM1. This increased bioavailability means that GM1lactone can be considered as a potential prodrug of GM1.  相似文献   

13.
Ganglioside GM1, 3H-labelled at the level of terminal galactose or of sphingosine, was intravenously injected into Swiss albino mice and some steps in its metabolic fate in the liver were investigated. After administration of [3H]sphingosine-labelled GM1 all major liver gangliosides [GM3, GM2, GM1, GD1a-(NeuAc,NeuGl)] became radioactive, the radioactivity residing in all cases on the sphingosine moiety. The specific radioactivity was highest in GM1, which carried about 53% of the radioactivity incorporated into gangliosides, followed by GM2, with 34.5% of incorporated radioactivity, GM3 and GD1a-(NeuAc,NeuGl), both with about 5% of incorporated radioactivity. After administration of [3H]galactose-labelled GM1 the only radioactive gangliosides present in the liver were GM1 and GD1a-(NeuAc,NeuGl), the former carrying about 95% of the total ganglioside-incorporated radioactivity, the latter about 3%. Both gangliosides were radioactive exclusively in the terminal galactose residue. According to these results exogenously administered GM1, after being taken up by the liver, is mainly degraded to GM2 and GM3, a part being, however, sialylated to GD1a-(NeuAc,NeuGl). All this suggests that exogenous GM1 may be involved in the metabolic routes of endogenous liver gangliosides.  相似文献   

14.
Cerebellar granule cells differentiated in culture were incubated with ganglioside [3H-Sph]GM1 in order to have it inserted into the plasma membrane and metabolized. Among the formed metabolites radioactive sphingosine and ceramide were identified. [3H]Ceramide started to be measurable after 10 min of incubation (pulse), and [3H]sphingosine after 15 min. Their concentrations increased with pulse time, and, after a 1-hour pulse, with chase time. After a 1-hour pulse with 2 x 10(-6) M [3H-Sph]GM1 followed by a 4-hour chase, the amount of [3H]sphingosine and [3H]ceramide formed were 0.04 and 0.4 pmol/10(6) cells, respectively. Particularly the ability to produce sphingosine was higher in differentiated than in undifferentiated cells. It is concluded that ganglioside turnover contributes to the maintenance of the intracellular levels of free sphingosine and ceramide.  相似文献   

15.
Sialidases cleave off sialic acid residues from the oligosaccharide chain of gangliosides in their catabolic pathway while sialyltransferases transfer sialic acid to the growing oligosaccharide moiety in ganglioside biosynthesis. Ganglioside GM3 is a common substrate for both types of enzymes, for sialidase acting on ganglioside GM3 as well as for ganglioside GD3 synthase. Therefore, it is possible that both enzymes recognize similar structural features of the sialic acid moiety of their common substrate, ganglioside GM3. Based on this idea we used a variety of GM3 derivatives as glycolipid substrates for a bacterial sialidase (Clostridium perfringens) and for GD3 synthase (of rat liver Golgi vesicles). This study revealed that those GM3 derivatives that were poorly degraded by sialidase also were hardly recognized by sialyltransferase (GD3 synthase). This may indicate similarities in the substrate binding sites of these enzymes.  相似文献   

16.
GM1 ganglioside beta-galactosidase (GM1-beta-galactosidase) was purified from normal cat brain and liver by a combination of classical and affinity procedures. The final preparation of brain GM1-beta-galactosidase was enriched over 2000-fold with a 36% yield. However, the product was shown to contain several components by disc gel electrophoresis. GM1-beta-galactosidase was also purified from liver with greater than a 30 000-fold enrichment and 40% yield. The liver enzyme was judged homogeneous by disc gel electrophoresis at pH 4.3, 8.1, and 8.9 and by gel chromatography. Both liver and brain GM1-beta-galactosidase(s) eluted as sharp symmetrical peaks from Sephadex G-200 with molecular weights of 250 000 +/- 50 000. The apparent Km determined for 4-methylumbelliferyl beta-D-galactopyranoside (4-MU-Gal) using partially purified brain GM1-beta-galactosidase was 1.73 X 10(-4) M. Liver GM1-beta-galactosidase gave a Km with 4-MU-Gal of 3.25 X 10(-4) M and for [3H]GM1 ganglioside a Km of 4.51 X 10(-4) M was calculated. The pH optima of brain and liver GM1-beta-galactosidase using 4-MU-Gal was 3.8-4.5. By contrast, liver GM1-beta-galactosidase gave a sharp activity peak at pH 4.2 with [3H]GM1 ganglioside. Inhibition by mercuric chloride and sensitivity to hydrogen peroxide and persulfate suggest the involvement of a sulfhydryl in catalysis.  相似文献   

17.
18.
GM2-ganglioside (II3NeuAcGgOse3Cer) is a minor component of adult nervous tissue, but is probably an oncofetal antigen. Its biological role is unknown, but several lines of evidence indicate its potential role in cell adhesion both in the retina and in oligodendrocytes. The biosynthesis of GM2-ganglioside appears to be tightly regulated, since it is a key intermediate in complex ganglioside synthesis. The specific GM3: hexosaminyl-transferase is activated under conditions which activate cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase, and cell transformation with retroviruses inactivates it. Catabolism of GM2 requires the concerted action of three gene products (alpha-chain, beta-chain and activator protein in a thermolabile alpha beta 2 AP complex referred to as HexA). Defects in either three components results in the neuronal storage of GM2 ganglioside and the manifestations of Tay-Sachs Disease in children or motor neuron disease in adults.  相似文献   

19.
20.
An immunohistochemical method utilizing anti-ganglioside GM1 antiserum combined with the peroxidase-antiperoxidase technique was applied to a mixed cell population in primary cultures of newborn rat brain. Ganglioside GM1 was demonstrated to be present in neurons and oligodendroglia, but was absent in astroglia. This demonstration was confirmed using a newly developed biotinylated choleragen-avidin-peroxidase procedure. Primary cultures from newborn rat brain cells that had been subjected to a single treatment with trypsin (first passage) and then cultured for 14 days were predominately (95%) composed of astrocytes that stained positively for glial fibrillary acidic protein but were negative for GM1 ganglioside. This preparation contained only 0.34 nmol ganglioside NeuNAc per mg protein compared to 23.9 nmol gangliosidic NeuNAc/mg protein for a five day culture of newborn rat brain mixed cell culture that had not been subjected to passage. Prolongation of culture time from 5 to 21 days in the latter preparation reduced the ganglioside NeuNAc content to 4.9 nmol gangliosidic NeuNAc/mg protein as the proportion of astrocytes in the culture increased. Ganglioside GM1 could not be detected by TLC analysis of the lipid extract obtained from the “pure” astrocyte culture, although small amounts of GM3 and some polysialogangliosides were detected. About half of the label incorporated upon 24 h incubation of astrocytes in the presence of N-[3H]acetylmannosammine appeared in ganglioside GM3. It is concluded that astrocytes in mixed cell primary cultures from newborn rat brain, as well as astrocytes in astroglial preparations derived from such cultures, do not contain ganglioside GM1.  相似文献   

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