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1.
Dolichyl D-[14C]mannosyl phosphate formed in calf pancreas microsomes was compared to dolichyl alpha-D-[14C]mannopyranosyl phosphate, a chemical synthesis of which is described. Jack bean alpha-mannosidase, which converted citronellyl alpha-D-mannopyranosyl phosphate, but not its beta anomer, to citronellyl phosphate and D-mannose, was effective in releasing D-[14C]mannose from dolichyl alpha-D-[14C]manopyranosyl phosphate in the presence of detergent. In contrast, alpha-mannosidase did not cause any significant release from the pancreatic dolichyl D-[14C]mannosyl phosphate. Alkali treatment (0.1 M NaOH in propanol at 65 and 90 degrees) degraded both dolichyl D-[14C]mannosyl phosphates with the formation of water-soluble 14C-labeled products. The pattern of 14C-labeled breakdown products formed from the synthetic dolichyl alpha-D-[14C]mannopyranosyl phosphate differed from that obtained from the pancreatic dolichyl D-[14C]mannosyl phosphate. Dolichyl alpha-D-[14C]mannopyranosyl phosphate yielded several 14C-labeled products, including a trace of D-[14C]mannosyl phosphate, and an acidic fraction which appeared to result from degradation of D-[14C]mannose. The pancreatic dolichyl D-[14C]mannosyl phosphate gave various products, depending on the temperature of the reaction: at 90 degrees, 20 to 30% of the radioactivity was found in D-[14C]mannosyl phosphate and the rest in acidic breakdown products; at 65 degrees, about two-thirds of the radioactivity was recovered in a compound which behaved as D-MANNOSE 2-PHOSPHATE, A Product characteristic of a beta-linked D-mannosyl residue. It is concluded that the pancreatic compound is dolichyl beta-D-[14C]mannosyl phosphate.  相似文献   

2.
We investigated whether the polyenic and allylic phosphate systems of retinyl phosphate are essential for its mannosyl acceptor and donor activities in rat liver postnuclear membranes. Perhydromonoeneretinyl phosphate, a compound without growth-promoting activity in vitamin A-deficient animals, was prepared by catalytic hydrogenation of retinol and phosphorylation. Perhydromonoeneretinyl phosphate mannose synthesis from GDP-mannose showed continued accumulation for at least 60 min, while retinyl phosphate mannose synthesis showed a maximum at 20-30 min and then declined. Moreover, only retinyl phosphate stimulated transfer of mannose from GDP-mannose to endogenous proteins, which were separated by sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis. Thus, hydrogenation of side-chain double bonds in retinyl phosphate impaired only slightly its mannosyl acceptor activity, but caused loss of mannosyl donor activity.  相似文献   

3.
A study was conducted to determine whether retinyl phosphate would act as substrate for the enzymatic synthesis of mannosyl retinyl phosphate. Retinyl phosphate, prepared chemically, supported the growth of vitamin A-deficient rats at the same rate as retinol. It also stimulated the uptake of [14C]mannose from GDP-[14C]mannose into total chloroform-methanol extractable lipid. This reaction occurred in the presence of ATP, Mn2+, detergent (Zonyl A), and a membrane-rich enzyme preparation from the livers of vitamin A-deficient rats, provided that a lipid extract of the membrane preparation of alpha-L-lecithin was also added. Total chloroform-methanol-extractable, labeled mannolipid was separated into two principal labeled mannolipids by thin-layer or column chromatography or by differential solvent extraction. The properties of these mannolipids identified them as glycophospholipids: one was identical with authentic synthetic dolichyl mannosyl phosphate, and the other was concluded to be mannosyl retinyl phosphate because of its incorporation of radioactivity from [3H]retinyl phosphate, its rapid hydrolysis by dilute acid, and the formation of substance that cochromatographed with retinol upon its acid hydrolysis. The presence of ATP or GTP was essential for the stimulation of mannolipid synthesis, probably because of their protective action on the substrates against phosphatases present in the crude enzyme fraction. A pH of 6.0-6.2 favored the formation of dolichyl mannosyl phosphate; a higher pH (6.7-7.0) that of mannosyl retinyl phosphate.  相似文献   

4.
Dolichyl mannosyl phosphate and GDPmannose were active substrates for the transfer of mannose to methyl-alpha-D-mannose, p-nitrophenyl-alpha-D-mannose, and free mannose with rat liver microsomal membranes. The products formed during dolichyl mannosyl phosphate incubation with methyl-alpha-D-mannose or with mannose were alpha-linked. The disaccharides formed by incubation of dolichyl mannosyl phosphate or GDPmannose with mannose were identified by paper chromatography and electrophoresis as mannose-alpha-1,2-mannose and mannose-alpha-1,3-mannose. synthesis of each product was dependent on the assay conditions used and was most markedly affected by the presence of detergent. Transfer of mannose from either substrate to form mannose-alpha-1,3-mannose was severely inhibited by Triton X-100.  相似文献   

5.
Epithelial cells of the rat small intestine were collected as a gradient of villus to crypt cells. Homogenates of these cells incubated with GDP-D-[14C]mannose in the presence of MnCl2 incorporated radioactivity into dolichyl mannosyl phosphate and a mixutre of dolichyl pyrophosphate oligosaccharides varying in the size of their oligosaccharide moiety. The labeled oligosaccharides formed in villus cell homogenates appeared shorter than those formed in crypt cell homogenates. The addition of dolichyl phosphate greatly stimulated the synthesis of dolichyl mannosyl phosphate. The initial rate of synthesis of dolichyl mannosyl phosphate from GDP-D-[14C]mannose and exogenous dolichyl phosphate was highest in an intermediate cell fraction having a low specific activity of sucrase and alkaline phosphatase and an intermediate specific activity of thymidine kinase. To compare the rates of dolichyl mannosyl phosphate synthesis in the different cell fractions, it was essential to control degradation of GDP-D-[14]mannose by the addition of AMP to the incubation, since villus cells degraded GDP-D-[14C]mannose much faster than crypt cells.  相似文献   

6.
Cutinase, a glycoprotein containing O-glycosidically linked carbohydrates, is induced in glucose-grown Fusarium solani f. pisi by cutin hydrolysate. Microsomal preparations from the induced cells catalyzed mannosyl transfer from GDP-mannose to glycolipid and glycoprotein fractions but not into oligosaccharide lipids. Maximal rates of mannosyl transfer into glycolipids and glycoproteins were obtained with 5 mm Mg2+ and 10 mm Mn2+, respectively. Mannosyl transfer into glycolipids and glycoproteins showed pH optima of 8.0 and 7.0, respectively, and both transfers showed an apparent Km of about 2 μm for GDP-mannose. The mannosyl lipid was identified as β-d-mannosyl phosphoryl dolichol by thinlayer and ion-exchange chromatography, as well as by analyses of the products derived from it by acid and base treatments. The fungal microsomal preparation also catalyzed mannosyl transfer from GDP-mannose to exogenous dolichol phosphate. This transfer was stimulated maximally by 0.09% Triton X-100 and showed a pH optimum at pH 8.0. The apparent Km values for dolichol phosphate and GDP-mannose were 120 and 2.3 μm, respectively. The product derived from exogenous dolichol phosphate was identified as β-d-mannosyl phosphoryl dolichol as indicated above. The endogenous mannosyl acceptor lipid from this fungus was isolated by DEAE-cellulose chromatography. Analysis of the p-nitrobenzoyl derivatives of the base hydrolysis products of this acceptor lipid by highperformance liquid chromatography showed that the major components of this dolichol were C95 and C100. The microsomal preparation also catalyzed the transfer of mannose from exogenous mannosyl phosphoryl dolichol to glycoproteins with a pH optimum of 7.5 and an apparent Km of 1.7 μm. Analyses of the β-elimination products of the glycoproteins generated from both GDP-mannose and dolichol phosphoryl mannose showed that single mannosyl residues were transferred to hydroxyl groups of the endogenous proteins. Exogenous cutinase was not glycosylated even after denaturation, sulfitolysis, or removal of carbohydrates by HF hydrolysis. Sodium dodecyl sulfate electrophoresis indicated that cutinase and its possible precursors were among the in vitro glycosylation products. Bacitracin and amphomycin but not tunicamycin inhibited the mannosyl transfer reactions.  相似文献   

7.
The surface antigens of the free-living protozoan Paramecium primaurelia belong to the family of glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPtdIns)-anchored proteins. Using a cell-free system prepared from P. primaurelia, we have described the structure and biosynthetic pathway for GPtdIns glycolipids. The core glycans of the polar glycolipids are modified by a mannosyl phosphate side chain. The data suggest that the mannosyl phosphate side chain is added onto the core glycan in two steps. The first step involves the phosphorylation of the GPtdIns trimannosyl conserved core glycan via an ATP-dependent kinase, prior to the addition of the mannose linked to the phosphate group. We show that dolichol phosphate mannose is the donor of all mannose residues including the mannose linked to phosphate. Furthermore, we were able to identify in vitro a hydrophilic intermediate containing an additional N-acetylgalactosamine linked to the mannosyl phosphate side chain. The addition of this purified hydrophilic radiolabelled intermediate into the cell-free system leads to a loss of the GalNAc residue and its conversion to the penultimate intermediate having only mannosyl phosphate as a side chain. Together the data indicate that the GalNAc-containing intermediate is a transitional intermediate. We suggest that the GalNAc-containing intermediate is essential for biosynthesis and maturation of GPtdIns precursors. It is hypothesized that this oligosaccharide processing in the course of GPtdIns biosynthesis is required for the translocation of GPtdIns from the cytoplasmic side of the endoplasmic reticulum to the luminal side.  相似文献   

8.
Evidence suggesting that a single enzyme catalyzes mannosyl transfer from GDP-mannose to both dolichyl phosphate and to phenyl phosphate was obtained as follows: (a) The two activities were coeluted from columns of DEAE-cellulose and Sepharose CL-6B, (b) both reactions demonstrated similar kinetic constants for the glycosyl donor and for guanosine nucleoside inhibitors, (c) both reactions were sensitive to inhibition by low concentrations of nonionic detergents, and (d) both activities were found to be thermally inactivated at similar rates upon incubation at 55 degrees. The reaction conditions required for optimal mannosyl transfer by the purified enzyme preparation to the hydrophobic and water soluble acceptors, however, were found to be quite different. Whereas mannosyl transfer from GDP-mannose to dolichyl phosphate occurred at maximal rates only in the presence of specific phospholipids, the rate of mannosyl transfer to phenyl phosphate was essentially unaffected by the addition of phospholipid. These results indicate that dolichyl-mannosyl-phosphate-synthase, which has some of the properties of an intrinsic membrane protein, does not have an absolute requirement for phospholipid for catalytic activity, but rather that phospholipid is required for interaction of the enzyme with the long chain polyisoprenol substrate dolichyl phosphate.  相似文献   

9.
Dolichyl mannosyl phosphate and GDPmannose were active substrates for the transfer of mannose to methyl-α-d-mannose, p-nitrophenyl-α-d-mannose, and free mannose with rat liver microsomal membranes. The products formed during dolichyl mannosyl phosphate incubation with methyl-α-d-mannose or with mannose were α-linked. The dissaccharides formed by incubation of dolichyl mannosyl phosphate or GDPmannose with mannose were identified by paper chromatography and electrophoresis as mannose-α-1,2-mannose and mannose-α-1,3-mannose. Synthesis of each product was dependent on the assay conditions used and was most markedly affected by the presence of detergent. Transfer of mannose from either substrate to form mannose-α-1,3-mannose was severely inhibited by Triton X-100.  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.
The transfer of mannose from GDP-mannonse to exogenous glycopeptides and simple glycosides has been shown to be carried out by calf thyroid particles (Adamany, A. M., and Spiro, R. G. (1975) J. Biol. Chem. 250, 2830-2841). The present investigation indicates that this mannosylation process is accomplished through two sequential enzymatic reactions. The first involves the transfer of mannose from the sugar nucleotide to an endogenous acceptor to form a compound which has the properties of dolichyl mannosyl phosphate, while in the properties of dolichyl mannosyl phosphate, while in the second reaction this mannolipid serves as the glycosyl donor to exogenous acceptors. The particle-bound enzyme which catalyzed the first reaction utilized GDP-mannose (Km = 0.29 microM) as the most effective mannosyl donor, required a divalent cation, preferably manganese or calcium, and acted optimally at pH 6.3. Mannolipid synthesis was reversed by addition of GDP and a ready exchange of the mannose moiety was observed between [14C]mannolipid and unlabeled GDP-mannose. Exogenously supplied dolichyl phosphate, and to a lesser extent ficaprenyl phosphate, served as acceptors for the transfer reaction. The 14C-labeled endogenous lipid had the same chromatographic behavior as synthetic dolichyl mannosyl phosphate and enzymatically mannosylated dolichyl phosphate. The mannose component in the endogenous lipid was not susceptible to reduction with sodium borohydride and was released by mild acid hydrolysis. Alkaline treatment of the mannolipid released a phosphorylated mannose with properties consistent with that of mannose 2-phosphate. The formation of this compound which can arise from a cyclic 1,2-phosphate indicated, on the basis of steric considerations, that the mannose is present in beta linkage to the phosphate of the lipid. An intermediate role of the mannolipid in the glycosylation of exogenous acceptors was suggested by the observation that addition of dolichyl phosphate to thyroid particles resulted in a marked enhancement of mannose transfer from GDP-mannose to methyl-alpha-D-mannopyranoside acceptor while the presence of the glycoside caused a decrease in the mannolipid level. The glycosyl donor function of the polyisoprenyl mannosyl phosphate in the second reaction of the mannosylation sequence could be directly demonstrated by the transfer of [14C]mannose from purified endogenous mannolipid to either methyl-alpha-D-mannoside or dinitrophenyl unit A glycopeptides by thyroid enzyme in the presence of Triton X-100. The mannosylation of the glycoside was not inhibited by EDTA whereas the transfer of mannose to glycopeptide was cation-dependent. While dolichyl [14C]mannosyl phosphate, prepared from exogenous dolichyl phosphate, served as a donor of mannose to exogenous acceptor, this function could not be fulfilled by ficaprenyl [14C]mannosyl phosphate. The two-step reaction sequence carried out by thyroid enzymes which leads to the formation of an alpha-D-manno-pyranosyl-D-mannose linkage in exogenous acceptors by transfer of mannose from GDP-mannose through a beta-linked intermediate appears to involve a double inversion of anomeric configuration of this sugar.  相似文献   

12.
Diumycin, a phosphoglycolipid antibiotic, inhibits different mannosyl transfer reactions in yeast. Using membrane preparations, the drug effectively inhibited the formation of dolichyl phosphate mannose (DolP-Man); 50% inhibition was observed at approximately 10 microgram/ml. To a lesser extent also mannosyl transfer from DolP-Man to protein decreased in presence of diumycin. Both mannosyl transfer to protein-serine/threonine acceptor sites as well as into positions within the asparagine-linked polymannose part of the yeast mannoprotein are inhibited to about 60% under conditions where DolP-Man formation is blocked. DolP-Man synthesis as well as mannosyl transfer from DolP-Man to protein are also inhibited by diumycin using solubilized enzymes and exogenous acceptor substrates. Glycosyltransfer reactions from GDP-mannose either to protein-serine/threonine-linked mannose (formation of short manno-oligosaccharides) or to dolichyl-diphosphate-linked chitobiose (formation of lipid-linked trisaccharide) are not inhibited by diumycin under conditions where DolP-Man synthesis is blocked by the antibiotic. The inhibitory action of diumycin on DolP-Man formation does not seem to be competitive with respect to dolichyl phosphate, since it cannot be overcome by higher concentrations of dolichyl phosphate.  相似文献   

13.
Two phosphate-modified analogues of dolichyl phosphate were evaluated as substrates or inhibitors of the reactions catalyzed by mammalian microsomal enzymes. Dolichyl H-phosphonate could serve as an efficient acceptor for mannosyl and glucosyl transfer. The reaction products were chromatographically different from those formed from dolichyl phosphate. Lower activity of the H-phosphonate was observed for the reaction of N-acetylglucosaminyl phosphate transfer from UDP-GlcNAc. Dolichyl sulphate was shown not to serve as a substrate for the transfer of mannosyl (from GDP-Man), glucosyl (from UDP-Glc) or N-acetylglucosaminyl phosphate (from UDP-GlcNAc) residues in the presence of rat liver microsomes. Weak inhibitory properties of this analogue were demonstrated.  相似文献   

14.
The formation of mannolipid through catalysis by mannosyl transferase of adult females of Schistosoma mansoni was found to be 2-3 fold higher than male worms. In contrast, mannosyl transferase in immature females generated approximately the same amount of mannolipid as male worms, immature or not. Exogenous dolichol phosphate added to homogenates of male worms produced a stoichiometric increase in mannolipid formation. Saturating amounts of dolichol phosphate generated similar mannosyl transferase activities in male and female homogenates, showing that in S. mansoni, dolichol phosphate is the lipid intermediate in the glycosylation reaction and that this mannolipid is a rate-limiting substrate. Thin layer chromatography revealed that the mannolipid was identical in male and female worms. Adult males incubated with 14C-acetate synthesised several apolar compounds, one of which displayed a Rf identical to that of the mannolipid. When exposed to 14C-acetate treated males in vitro, untreated females were able to incorporate a compound, which partitioned in the same way as the mannolipid. The increased mannosyl transferase-dependent mannolipid formation in adult females may reflect a higher energy demand by these parasites, which is probably associated with oogenesis.  相似文献   

15.
The subcellular distribution of the enzyme catalysing the conversion of retinyl phosphate and GDP-[14C]mannose into [14C]mannosyl retinyl phosphate was determined by using subcellular fractions of rat liver. Purity of fractions, as determined by marker enzymes, was 80% or better. The amount of mannosyl retinyl phosphate formed (pmol/min per mg of protein) for each fraction was: rough endoplasmic reticulum 0.48 +/- 0.09 (mean +/- S.D.); smooth membranes (consisting of 60% smooth endoplasmic reticulum and 40% Golgi apparatus), 0.18 +/- 0.03; Golgi apparatus, 0.13 +/- 0.03; and plasma membrane 0.02.  相似文献   

16.
Membrane preparations from clover seedlings catalyzed the incorporation of monosaccharide residues from GDPMan, UDPGlc and UDPGal into glycolipids, lipid-oligosaccharides and polymers. The lipid-oligosaccharides were shown to be alpha-dihydropolyprenyl pyrophosphate derivatives. Incorporation of mannose residues into the lipid-oligosaccharides and the polymers was significantly stimulated by addition of UDPGlc, GDPGlc, UDPGal but not by UDPGlcNAc. Exogenic polyprenyl phosphates also stimulated the process; the formation of moraprenyl pyrophosphate oligosaccharides was demonstrated after addition of moraprenyl phosphate. The lipid-oligosaccharides were precursors of the polymers which were shown to be mainly glycoproteins. A solubilized preparation of mannosyl transferase from clover membranes was obtained and some properties of the enzyme were studied.  相似文献   

17.
Glycolipids synthesized in a cell-free system prepared from the free-living protozoan Paramecium primaurelia and labelled with [3H]mannose and [3H]glucosamine using GDP-[3H]mannose and UDP-[3H]N-acetyl glucosamine, respectively, were identified and structurally characterized as glycosylinositol-phosphoceramides (GIP-ceramides). The ceramide-based lipid was also found in the GIP membrane anchor of the G surface antigen of P.primaurelia, strain 156. Using a combination of in vitro labelling with GDP-[3H]mannose and in vivo labelling with 33P, we found that the core glycans of the P.primaurelia GIP-ceramides were substituted with an acid-labile modification identified as mannosyl phosphate. The modification of the glycosylinositol-phospholipid core glycan by mannosyl phosphate has not been described to date in other organisms. The biosynthesis of GIP-ceramide intermediates in P.primaurelia was studied by a pulse-chase analysis. Their structural characterization is reported. We propose the following structure for the putative GIP-ceramide membrane anchor precursor of P.primaurelia surface proteins: ethanolamine phosphate-6Man-alpha 1-2Man-alpha 1-6Man-(mannosyl phosphate)-alpha 1-4glucosamine-inositol-phosphoceramide.  相似文献   

18.
GDP-mannose and UDP-mannose (each at less than 1 micrometer) markedly inhibit glucosyl transfer from UDP-glucose (1.6 micrometer( to dolichyl phosphate in liver microsomal preparations. The biphasic response suggests the presence of two glucosyl transferases only one of which is inhibited. The inhibition appears to be a property of the intact nucleotide phosphate sugars and not due to competition for a limited pool of dolichyl phosphate. UDP-galactose and UDP-xylose cause a less marked inhibition of the same enzyme. The failure of UDP-glucose to inhibit mannosyl transfer suggests that the pool of dolichol monophosphate used by mannosyl transferase is not available to the glucosyl transferase. The relationship between the degree to which an exogenous prenol phosphate acts as an acceptor of mannose and the degree to which it inhibits mannosylation of endogenous dolichyl monophosphate varies among different prenyl phosphates. Mannosyl transferase exhibits two pH optima.  相似文献   

19.
The N-linked oligosaccharides, from Saccharomyces cerevisiae mnn1 mnn9 mutant mannoprotein extracted from the cells in hot citrate buffer, were separated by ion exchange into a monophosphate diester, a monophosphate monoester, a diphosphate diester, and a diphosphate monoester diester. The structures of the major components with diesterified phosphate were assigned as follows (where M = mannose), according to a recently revised oligosaccharide structure for the mnn mutants (Hernandez, L. M., Ballou, L., Alvarado, E., Gillece-Castro, B. L., Burlingame, A. L., and Ballou, C. E. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 11849-11856). formula; see text The monoester derivatives were mixtures of the possible isomers produced by removal of one or the other phosphoglycosyl-linked mannose units, and they were shown to arise by chemical degradation during isolation. The mnn1 mnn2 mnn10 acidic oligosaccharide fraction contained a mono- and a diphosphate ester. The monophosphate consisted predominantly of a single isomer with a mannosyl phosphate unit located at the end of the outer chain in an oligosaccharide with the following structure, where x may range from 2 to 12. The diphosphate had a mannosyl phosphate in this formula; see text position as well as one on the terminal alpha 1----6-linked mannose in the core. The presence in the mnn1 mnn9 or mnn1 mnn2 mnn10 background of the mnn4 or mnn6 mutations, which are known to regulate phosphorylation in yeast, reduced phosphorylation by 90% but did not eliminate it. AI-12522  相似文献   

20.
The use of dolichyl phosphate-containing liposomes in glycoprotein biosynthesis under conditions that control the transfer of exogenous dolichyl phosphate from liposomes to microsomes is described. The exogenously added dolichyl phosphate is available for mannosylation, and direct evidence for the role of dolichyl phosphate as intermediate in protein mannosylation was shown by use of liposomes containing dolichyl [14C]mannosyl phosphate.  相似文献   

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