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1.
Using hypotonically permeabilized Toxoplasma gondii tachyzoites, we investigated the topology of the free glycosylphosphatidylinositols (GPIs) within the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membrane. The morphology and permeability of parasites were checked by electron microscopy and release of a cytosolic protein. The membrane integrity of organelles (ER and rhoptries) was checked by protease protection assays. In initial experiments, GPI biosynthetic intermediates were labeled with UDP-[6-(3)H]GlcNAc in permeabilized parasites, and the transmembrane distribution of the radiolabeled lipids was probed with phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C (PI-PLC). A new early intermediate with an acyl modification on the inositol was identified, indicating that inositol acylation also occurs in T. gondii. A significant portion of the early GPI intermediates (GlcN-PI and GlcNAc-PI) could be hydrolyzed following PI-PLC treatment, indicating that these glycolipids are predominantly present in the cytoplasmic leaflet of the ER. Permeabilized T. gondii parasites labeled with either GDP-[2-(3)H]mannose or UDP-[6-(3)H]glucose showed that the more mannosylated and side chain (Glc-GalNAc)-modified GPI intermediates are also preferentially localized in the cytoplasmic leaflet of the ER.  相似文献   

2.
Glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) membrane protein anchors are synthesized from sugar nucleotides and phospholipids in the ER and transferred to newly synthesized proteins destined for the cell surface. The topology of GPI synthesis in the ER was investigated using sealed trypanosome microsomes and the membrane-impermeant probes phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C, Con A, and proteinase K. All the GPI biosynthetic intermediates examined were found to be located on the external face of the microsomal vesicles suggesting that the principal steps of GPI assembly occur in the cytoplasmic leaflet of the ER. Protease protection experiments showed that newly GPI-modified trypanosome variant surface glycoprotein was primarily oriented towards the ER lumen, consistent with eventual expression at the cell surface. The unusual topographical arrangement of the GPI assembly pathway suggests that a biosynthetic intermediate, possibly the phosphoethanolamine-containing anchor precursor, must be translocated across the ER membrane bilayer in the process of constructing a GPI anchor.  相似文献   

3.
Non-acetylated glucosamine is an unusual structural feature shared by all glycosyl phosphatidylinositol (GPI) lipids, including a variety of membrane anchors, the leishmanial lipophosphoglycan, and a mediator of insulin action. We proposed previously a pathway for biosynthesis of glycolipid A, the precursor of the GPI membrane anchor of the trypanosome variant surface glycoprotein (Masterson, W. J., Doering, T. L., Hart, G. W., and Englund, P. T. (1989) Cell 56, 793-800). In this paper we characterize in more detail the initial steps of GPI assembly. The first and committed step in the pathway is the transfer of GlcNAc, from UDP-GlcNAc, to endogenous phosphatidylinositol to form N-acetylglucosaminyl phosphatidylinositol (GlcNAc-PI). The GlcNAc-PI is then efficiently deacetylated to form glucosaminyl phosphatidylinositol (GlcN-PI), the substrate for subsequent reactions en route to glycolipid A.  相似文献   

4.
Glycosylphosphatidylinositols (GPIs) are synthesized in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) via the sequential addition of monosaccharides, fatty acid, and phosphoethanolamine(s) to phosphatidylinositol (PI). While attempting to establish a mammalian cell-free system for GPI biosynthesis, we found that the assembly of mannosylated GPI species was impaired when purified ER preparations were substituted for unfractionated cell lysates as the enzyme source. To explore this problem we analyzed the distribution of the various GPI biosynthetic reactions in subcellular fractions prepared from homogenates of mammalian cells. The results indicate the following: (i) the initial reaction of GPI assembly, i.e. the transfer of GlcNAc to PI to form GlcNAc-PI, is uniformly distributed in the ER; (ii) the second step of the pathway, i.e. de-N-acetylation of GlcNAc-PI to yield GlcN-PI, is largely confined to a subcompartment of the ER that appears to be associated with mitochondria; (iii) the mitochondria-associated ER subcompartment is enriched in enzymatic activities involved in the conversion of GlcN-PI to H5 (a singly mannosylated GPI structure containing one phosphoethanolamine side chain; and (iv) the mitochondria-associated ER subcompartment, unlike bulk ER, is capable of the de novo synthesis of H5 from UDP-GlcNAc and PI. The confinement of these GPI biosynthetic reactions to a domain of the ER provides another example of the compositional and functional heterogeneity of the ER. The implications of these findings for GPI assembly are discussed.  相似文献   

5.
A number of eukaryotic proteins are anchored to the membrane by glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI), of which the core structure is conserved from protozoan to mammalian cells. Here, we used a panel of thymoma mutants, which synthesize Thy-1 but cannot express it on the cell surface, to study the GPI biosynthetic pathway in mammalian cells. These mutants have been assigned into six complementation classes (A, B, C, E, F, H) by the technique of somatic cell hybridization. Using a combination of metabolic labeling and chemical/enzymatic tests, the biosynthetic defects were mapped to four different steps. Class A, C, and H mutants cannot transfer N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) to a phosphatidylinositol acceptor, suggesting that the first step of GPI synthesis is regulated by at least three genes. The Class E mutant does not synthesize dolichol-phosphate-mannose, the donor for the first mannose residue transferred to the GPI core, and thus cannot form any mannose-containing GPI precursors. Class B and F mutants are defective in the addition of the third mannose residue or ethanolamine phosphate, respectively, to the elongating GPI core. Our findings have implications for the biosynthesis and attachment of the mammalian GPI anchor.  相似文献   

6.
The precursor oligosaccharide donor for protein N-glycosylation in eukaryotes, Glc3Man9GlcNAc(2)-P-P-dolichol, is synthesized in two stages on both leaflets of the rough endoplasmic reticulum (ER). There is good evidence that the level of dolichyl monophosphate (Dol-P) is one rate-controlling factor in the first stage of the assembly process. In the current topological model it is proposed that ER proteins (flippases) then mediate the transbilayer movement of Man-P-Dol, Glc-P-Dol, and Man5GlcNAc(2)-P-P-Dol from the cytoplasmic leaflet to the lumenal leaflet. The rate of flipping of the three intermediates could plausibly influence the conversion of Man5GlcNAc(2)-P-P-Dol to Glc3Man(9)GlcNAc(2)-P-P-Dol in the second stage on the lumenal side of the rough ER. This article reviews the current understanding of the enzymes involved in the de novo biosynthesis of Dol-P and other polyisoprenoid glycosyl carrier lipids and speculates about the role of membrane proteins and enzymes that could be involved in the transbilayer movement of the lipid intermediates and the recycling of Dol-P and Dol-P-P discharged during glycosylphosphatidylinositol anchor biosynthesis, N-glycosylation, and O- and C-mannosylation reactions on the lumenal surface of the rough ER.  相似文献   

7.
Many cell surface proteins are anchored to a membrane via a glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI), which is attached to the C termini in the endoplasmic reticulum. The inositol ring of phosphatidylinositol is acylated during biosynthesis of GPI. In mammalian cells, the acyl chain is added to glucosaminyl phosphatidylinositol at the third step in the GPI biosynthetic pathway and then is usually removed soon after the attachment of GPIs to proteins. The mechanisms and roles of the inositol acylation and deacylation have not been well clarified. Herein, we report derivation of human and Chinese hamster mutant cells defective in inositol acylation and the gene responsible, PIG-W. The surface expressions of GPI-anchored proteins on these mutant cells were greatly diminished, indicating the critical role of inositol acylation. PIG-W encodes a 504-amino acid protein expressed in the endoplasmic reticulum. PIG-W is most likely inositol acyltransferase itself because the tagged PIG-W affinity purified from transfected human cells had inositol acyltransferase activity and because both mutant cells were complemented with PIG-W homologs of Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Schizosaccharomyces pombe. The inositol acylation is not essential for the subsequent mannosylation, indicating that glucosaminyl phosphatidylinositol can flip from the cytoplasmic side to the luminal side of the endoplasmic reticulum.  相似文献   

8.
Yeast glycan biosynthetic pathways are commonly studied through metabolic incorporation of an exogenous radiolabeled compound into a target glycan. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) biosynthesis, [(3) H]inositol has been widely used to identify intermediates that accumulate in conditional GPI synthesis mutants. However, this approach also labels non-GPI lipid species that overwhelm detection of early GPI intermediates during chromatography. In this study, we show that despite lacking the ability to metabolize N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc), S.?cerevisiae is capable of importing low levels of extracellular GlcNAc via almost all members of the hexose transporter family. Furthermore, expression of a heterologous GlcNAc kinase gene permits efficient incorporation of exogenous [(14) C]GlcNAc into nascent GPI structures in vivo, dramatically lowering the background signal from non-GPI lipids. Utilizing this new method with several conditional GPI biosynthesis mutants, we observed and characterized novel accumulating lipids that were not previously visible using [(3) H]inositol labeling. Chemical and enzymatic treatments of these lipids indicated that each is a GPI intermediate likely having one to three mannoses and lacking ethanolamine phosphate (Etn-P) side-branches. Our data support a model of yeast GPI synthesis that bifurcates after the addition of the first mannose and that includes a novel branch that produces GPI species lacking Etn-P side-branches.  相似文献   

9.
Transfer of a glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchor to proteins carrying a C-terminal GPI-directing signal sequence occurs after protein translocation across the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). We describe the translocation and GPI modification of a model protein, preprominiPLAP, in ER microsomes depleted of lumenal content by high pH washing. In untreated microsomes preprominiPLAP was processed to prominiPLAP and GPI-anchored miniPLAP. Both products were fully translocated, since they resisted proteinase K treatment of the microsomes, and both behaved as membrane proteins by the carbonate extraction criterion. Microsomes depleted of lumenal content were able to translocate and process preprominiPLAP to give protease-protected prominiPLAP, but were unable to convert prominiPLAP to miniPLAP. Loss of GPI anchoring capacity occurred with a wash of pH > 9.5. If the alkaline wash was performed after formation of prominiPLAP conversion to miniPLAP was relatively unimpaired. The results indicate that constituents of the ER lumen, possibly chaperones interacting with the proprotein and/or the GPI anchor precursor, are required in the initial steps of GPI anchoring.  相似文献   

10.
Two glycosaminoglycan-protein linkage tetrasaccharide-serine compounds, GlcAβ1-3Galβ1-3Galβ1-4Xylβ1-O-Ser and GlcAβ1-3Gal(4-O-sulfate)β1-3Galβ1-4Xylβ1-O-Ser, were tested as hexosamine acceptors, using UDP-[3H]GlcNAc and UDP-[3H]GalNAc as sugar donors, and solubilized mouse mastocytoma microsomes as enzyme source. The nonsulfated Ser-tetrasaccharide was found to function as an acceptor for a GalNAc residue, whereas the Ser-tetrasaccharide containing a sulfated galactose unit was inactive. Characterization of the radio-labelled product by digestion with α-N-acetylgalactosaminidase and β-N-acetylhexosaminidase revealed that the [3H]GalNAc unit was α-linked, as in the product previously synthesized using serum enzymes, and not β-linked as found in the chondroitin sulfate polymer. Heparan sulfate/heparin biosynthesis could not be primed by either of the two linkage Ser-tetrasaccharides, since no transfer of [3H]GlcNAc from UDP-[3H]GlcNAc could be detected. By contrast, transfer of a [3H]GlcNAc unit to a [GlcAβ1-4GlcNAcα1-4]2-GlcAβ1-4-aMan hexasaccharide acceptor used to assay the GlcNAc transferase involved in chain elongation, was readily detected. These results are in agreement with the recent proposal that two different N-acetylglucosaminyl transferases catalyse the biosynthesis of heparan sulfate. Although the mastocytoma system contains both the heparan sulfate/heparin and chondroitin sulfate biosynthetic enzymes the Ser-tetrasaccharides do not seem to fulfil the requirements to serve as acceptors for the first HexNAc transfer reactions involved in the formation of these polysaccharides. This revised version was published online in November 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

11.
Formation of protein-linked Glc1Man9GlcNAc2 , Glc1Man8GlcNAc2 , and Glc1Man7GlcNAc2 was detected in rat liver slices and Phaseolus vulgaris seeds incubated with [U-14C]glucose. Similar compounds were not synthesized in Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells incubated under similar conditions. Rat liver microsomes were incubated with [glucose-U-14C] Glc3Man9GlcNAc2-P-P-dolichol or UDP-[U-14C]Glc as glycosyl donors. Only in the latter condition protein-linked Glc1Man8GlcNAc2 and Glc1Man7GlcNAc2 were formed. Addition of mannooligosaccharides that strongly inhibited alpha 1-2-mannosidases to incubation mixtures containing rat liver microsomes and UDP-[U-14C]Glc did not prevent formation of protein-bound Glc1Man8GlcNAc2 and Glc1Man7GlcNAc2 . Furthermore, the presence of amphomycin in reaction mixtures containing liver membranes and UDP-[U-14C]Glc completely abolished synthesis of glucosylated derivatives of dolichol without affecting formation of protein-linked Glc1Man9GlcNAc2 , Glc1Man8GlcNAc2 , and Glc1Man7GlcNAc2 . The results reported above indicated that under the experimental conditions employed protein-bound Glc1Man9GlcNAc2 , Glc1Man8GlcNAc2 , and Glc1Man7GlcNAc2 were formed by glucosylation of unglucosylated oligosaccharides. Results obtained in pulse-chase experiments performed in vitro also supported this conclusion. UDP-Glc appeared to be the donor of the glucosyl residues. The rough endoplasmic reticulum was found to be the main subcellular site of protein glucosylation. It is tentatively suggested that this process could prevent extensive degradation of oligosaccharides by mannosidases during transit of glycoproteins through the endoplasmic reticulum.  相似文献   

12.
Glycosyl phosphoinositol (GPI) anchors on proteins can be modified by palmitoylation of their inositol residue, which makes such anchors resistant to cleavage by phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C (PI-PLC) (Roberts, W. L., Myher, J. J., Kuksis, A., Low, M. G., and Rosenberry, T.L. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 18766-18775). Mannosylated GPI lipids made in trypanosomal and mammalian cells can also be inositol-acylated, indicating that inositol acylation may be a normal step in GPI anchor synthesis. We find that Saccharomyces cerevisiae mutants blocked in dolichyl phosphate mannose synthesis accumulate a lipid that can be radiolabeled in vivo with [3H]myo-inositol, [3H]GlcN, and [3H]palmitic acid. This lipid is resistant to PI-PLC, yet sensitive to mild alkaline hydrolysis, and has been characterized as GlcN-phosphatidylinositol (PI), fatty acylated on its inositol residue. When yeast membranes are incubated with UDP-[14C] GlcNAc, 14C-labeled GlcNAc-PI and GlcN-PI are made. Addition of ATP and CoA, or of palmitoyl-CoA to incubations results in the synthesis of [14C]GlcN-(acyl-inositol)PI. This lipid is also made when membranes are incubated with [1-14C]palmitoyl-CoA and UDP-GlcNAc. We propose that acyl CoA is the donor in inositol acylation of GlcN-PI, and that GlcN-(acyl-inositol)PI is an obligatory intermediate in GPI synthesis.  相似文献   

13.
During protein N-glycosylation, dolichyl pyrophosphate (Dol-P-P) is discharged in the lumenal monolayer of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Dol-P-P is then cleaved to Dol-P by Dol-P-P phosphatase (DPPase). Studies with the yeast mutant cwh8Delta, lacking DPPase activity, indicate that recycling of Dol-P produced by DPPase contributes significantly to the pool of Dol-P utilized for lipid intermediate biosynthesis on the cytoplasmic leaflet. Whether Dol-P formed in the lumen diffuses directly back to the cytoplasmic leaflet or is first dephosphorylated to dolichol has not been determined. Incubation of sealed ER vesicles from calf brain with acetyl-Asn-Tyr-Thr-NH(2), an N-glycosylatable peptide, to generate Dol-P-P in the lumenal monolayer produced corresponding increases in the rates of Man-P-Dol, Glc-P-Dol, and GlcNAc-P-P-Dol synthesis in the absence of CTP. No changes in dolichol kinase activity were observed. When streptolysin-O permeabilized CHO cells were incubated with an acceptor peptide, N-glycopeptide synthesis, requiring multiple cycles of the dolichol pathway, occurred in the absence of CTP. The results obtained with sealed microsomes and CHO cells indicate that Dol-P, formed from Dol-P-P, returns to the cytoplasmic leaflet where it can be reutilized for lipid intermediate biosynthesis, and dolichol kinase is not required for recycling. It is possible that the flip-flopping of the carrier lipid is mediated by a flippase, which would provide a mechanism for the recycling of Dol-P derived from Man-P-Dol-mediated reactions in N-, O-, and C-mannosylation of proteins, GPI anchor assembly, and the three Glc-P-Dol-mediated reactions in Glc(3)Man(9)GlcNAc(2)-P-P-Dol (DLO) biosynthesis.  相似文献   

14.
Many eukaryotic cell surface proteins are bound to the membrane via the glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchor that is covalently linked to their carboxy-terminus. The GPI anchor precursor is synthesized in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and post-translationally linked to protein. We cloned a human gene termed PIG-B (phosphatidylinositol glycan of complementation class B) that is involved in transferring the third mannose. PIG-B encodes a 554 amino acid, ER transmembrane protein with an amino-terminal portion of approximately 60 amino acids on the cytoplasmic side and a large carboxy-terminal portion of 470 amino acids within the ER lumen. A mutant PIG-B lacking the cytoplasmic portion remains active, indicating that the functional site of PIG-B resides on the lumenal side of the ER membrane. The PIG-B gene was localized to chromosome 15 at q21-q22. This autosomal location would explain why PIG-B is not involved in the defective GPI anchor synthesis in paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria, which is always caused by a somatic mutation of the X-linked PIG-A gene.  相似文献   

15.
In addition to serving as membrane anchors for cell surface proteins, glycosylphosphatidylinositols (GPIs) can be found abundantly as free glycolipids in mammalian cells. In this study we analyze the subcellular distribution and intracellular transport of metabolically radiolabeled GPIs in three different cell lines. We use a variety of membrane isolation techniques (subcellular fractionation, plasma membrane vesiculation to isolate pure plasma membrane fractions, and enveloped viruses to sample cellular membranes) to provide direct evidence that free GPIs are not confined to their site of synthesis, the endoplasmic reticulum, but can redistribute to populate other subcellular organelles. Over short labeling periods (2.5 h), radiolabeled GPIs were found at similar concentration in all subcellular fractions with the exception of a mitochondria-enriched fraction where GPI concentration was low. Pulse-chase experiments over extended chase periods showed that although the total amount of cellular radiolabeled GPIs decreased, the plasma membrane complement of labeled GPIs increased. GPIs at the plasma membrane were found to populate primarily the exoplasmic leaflet as detected using periodate oxidation of the cell surface. Transport of GPIs to the cell surface was inhibited by Brefeldin A and blocked at 15 degrees C, suggesting that GPIs are transported to the plasma membrane via a vesicular mechanism. The rate of transport of radiolabeled GPIs to the cell surface was found to be comparable with the rate of secretion of newly synthesized soluble proteins destined for the extracellular space.  相似文献   

16.
The synthesis of the glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchor occurs in different compartments within the ER. We have previously shown that GPI anchor intermediates including GlcNAc-PI and GlcN-(acyl)PI are present in Triton insoluble membranes (TIMs), believed to be derived from lipid rafts. The present study was initiated to determine if GPI anchor intermediates move to raft-like domains after their synthesis or if these domains represent another ER compartment for GPI anchor synthesis. We determined that in transfected cells Pig-Ap and Pig-Lp, two proteins involved in the synthesis of GlcNAc-PI and GlcN-PI, respectively, are present in TIMs. In addition, we detected GlcNAc-PI synthase, GlcNAc-PI deacetylase, and GlcN-PI acyltransferase activities in TIMs isolated from untransfected cells. These results lend support to the possibility of additional GPI biosynthetic compartments in the ER and to the notion that GPI anchor intermediates produced in and outside raft-like domains may have a different fate.  相似文献   

17.
ERp57 is a lumenal protein of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and a member of the protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) family. In contrast to archetypal PDI, ERp57 interacts specifically with newly synthesized glycoproteins. In this study we demonstrate that ERp57 forms discrete complexes with the ER lectins, calnexin and calreticulin. Specific ERp57/calreticulin complexes exist in canine pancreatic microsomes, as demonstrated by SDS-PAGE after cross-linking, and by native electrophoresis in the absence of cross-linking. After in vitro translation and import into microsomes, radiolabeled ERp57 can be cross-linked to endogenous calreticulin and calnexin while radiolabeled PDI cannot. Likewise, radiolabeled calreticulin is cross-linked to endogenous ERp57 but not PDI. Similar results were obtained in Lec23 cells, which lack the glucosidase I necessary to produce glycoprotein substrates capable of binding to calnexin and calreticulin. This observation indicates that ERp57 interacts with both of the ER lectins in the absence of their glycoprotein substrate. This result was confirmed by a specific interaction between in vitro synthesized calreticulin and ERp57 prepared in solution in the absence of other ER components. We conclude that ERp57 forms complexes with both calnexin and calreticulin and propose that it is these complexes that can specifically modulate glycoprotein folding within the ER lumen.  相似文献   

18.
Rush  JS; Waechter  CJ 《Glycobiology》1998,8(12):1207-1213
In the current model for Glc3Man9GlcNAc2-P-P-Dol assembly, Man5GlcNAc2- P-P-Dol, Man-P-Dol, and Glc-P-Dol are synthesized on the cytoplasmic face of the ER and diffuse transversely to the lumenal leaflet where the synthesis of the lipid-bound precursor oligosaccharide is completed. To establish the topological sites of Glc-P-Dol synthesis and the lipid-mediated glucosyltransfer reactions involved in Glc3Man9GlcNAc2-P-P-Dol synthesis in ER vesicles from pig brain, the trypsin-sensitivity of Glc-P-Dol synthase activity and the Glc-P- Dol:Glc0-2Man9GlcNAc2-P-P-Dol glucosyltransferases (GlcTases) was examined in sealed microsomal vesicles. Since ER vesicles from brain do not contain glucose 6-phosphate (Glc 6-P) phosphatase activity, the latency of the lumenally oriented, processing glucosidase I/II activities was used to assess the intactness of the vesicle preparations. Comparative enzymatic studies with sealed ER vesicles from brain and kidney, a tissue that contains Glc 6-P phosphatase, demonstrate the reliability of using the processing glucosidase activities as latency markers for topological studies with microsomal vesicles from non-gluconeogenic tissues lacking Glc 6-P phosphatase. The results obtained from the trypsin-sensitivity assays with sealed microsomal vesicles from brain are consistent with a topological model in which Glc-P-Dol is synthesized on the cytoplasmic face of the ER, and subsequently utilized by the three Glc-P-Dol-mediated GlcTases after "flip-flopping" to the lumenal monolayer.   相似文献   

19.
Deficient expression of glycoinositol phospholipid (GPI) anchored proteins in affected paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH) cells has been traced to a defect in GPI anchor assembly. In a previous study (Schubert, J., Schmidt, R. E., and Medof, M. E. (1993) J. Biol. Chem., in press) we characterized the biosynthesis of putative Man-containing GPI anchor precursors in normal peripheral blood lymphocytes and investigated assembly of these intracellular GPI intermediates in CD48- affected and CD48+ unaffected T and natural killer cell lines of PNH patients. We found that affected T cells from five patients exhibited a uniform defect in which dolichol-phosphoryl-Man was synthesized but no GPI mannolipids were expressed. In this study, membranes of patients' affected T cells were labeled with UDP-[3H]GlcNAc to evaluate earlier steps in GPI synthesis, and intact cells were fused to Thy-1- murine lymphoma mutants harboring different defects in early GPI assembly to test for the presence of corresponding or complementary lesions. In all cases, affected cell membranes failed to assemble GlcNAc-inositol phospholipid, the initial precursor of GPI anchor structures, and the intact cells failed to complement class A mutants while complementing other classes. Affected polymorphonuclear leukocytes from three additional patients of different origin were then labeled with [3H]Man and the labeling patterns found to correspond to those obtained with the T lymphocytes. Taken together the data indicate that the genetic lesion in PNH cells resides in a DNA element which: 1) encodes a product required for the synthesis of GlcNAc-inositol phospholipid, 2) corresponds to that altered in class A Thy-1- murine lymphoma mutants, and 3) is commonly affected in different patients.  相似文献   

20.
Toxoplasmosis, a disease that affects humans and a wide variety of mammals is caused by Toxoplasma gondii, the obligate intracellular coccidian protozoan parasite. Most T. gondii research has focused on the rapidly growing invasive form, the tachyzoite, which expresses five major surface proteins attached to the parasite membrane by glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchors. We have recently reported the purification and partial characterization of candidate precursor glycolipids (GPIs) from metabolically labeled parasites and have presented evidence that these GPIs have a linear glycan backbone sequence indistinguishable from the GPI core glycan of the major tachyzoite surface protein, P30. In this report, we describe a cell-free system derived from tachyzoite membranes which is capable of catalyzing GPI biosynthesis. Incubation of the membrane preparations with radioactive sugar nucleotides (GDP-[3H]mannose or UDP-[3H]GlcNAc) resulted in incorporation of radiolabeled into numerous glycolipids. By using a combination of chemical/enzymatic tests and chromatographic analysis, a series of incompletely glycosylated lipid species and mature GPIs have been identified. We have also established the involvement of Dol-P-mannose in the synthesis of T. gondii GPIs by demonstrating that the incorporation of [3H]mannose into the mannosylated GPIs is stimulated by dolichylphosphate and inhibited by amphomycin. In addition, increasing the concentration of nonradioactive GDP mannose resulted in a loss of radiolabel from the first easily detectable GPI precursor, GlcN-PI, and a concomittant appearance of the radio-activity into mannosylated glycolipids. Altogether, our data suggest that the GPI core glycan in T. gondii is assembled via sequential glycosylation of phosphatidylinositol, as proposed for the biosynthesis of GPIs in Trypanosoma brucei. In contrast to T. brucei, preliminary experiments indicate that the core glycan of some GPIs synthesized by the T. gondii cell-free system is modified by N-acetylgalactosamine similar to the situation for mammalian Thy-1.  相似文献   

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