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1.
In this study, the substrate specificity of a newly identified rat brain ceramidase (CDase) was investigated. To this end, the major functional groups and stereochemistry of ceramide (Cer) were evaluated for their influence on the hydrolysis of substrate by this CDase. The results showed that, of the four possible stereoisomers of Cer, only the natural d-e-C(18)-Cer isomer was used as substrate (K(m) of 1.1 mol% and V(max) of 5 micromol/min/mg). Removal of the 4-5 trans double bond to generate dihydroceramide decreased the affinity of the enzyme toward its substrate by around 90%, whereas changing the configuration of the double bond from the natural trans configuration into cis or introduction of a hydroxyl group (phytoceramide) resulted in loss of hydrolysis. Shortening the chain length of the sphingosine backbone resulted in decreased affinity. Methylation of either the primary or the secondary hydroxyl groups resulted in loss of activity. Results also indicated that Cer species that harbor long saturated or monounsaturated fatty acyl chains are preferred substrates of the enzyme. alpha-Hydroxylated Cer demonstrated considerably higher affinity, indicating a preference of the enzyme to those Cer molecular species. These results disclose a very high specificity of nonlysosomal CDase for its substrate, Cer.  相似文献   

2.
Ceramidases (CDase) are enzymes that catalyze the hydrolysis of N-acyl linkage of ceramide (Cer) to generate sphingosine and free fatty acids. In this study we report the purification and characterization of a novel second type of neutral ceramidase from rat brain (RBCDase II). Triton X-100 protein extract from rat brain membrane was purified sequentially using Q-Sepharose, HiLoad16/60 Superdex 200pg, heparin-Sepharose, phenyl-Sepharose HP, and Mono Q columns. After Mono Q, the specific activity of the enzyme increased by ~15,000-fold over that of the rat brain homogenate. This enzyme has pH optima of 7.5, and it has a larger apparent molecular weight (110kDa) than the previously purified (90kDa) and characterized neutral rat brain CDase (RBCDase I). De-glycosylation experiments show that the differences in molecular mass of RBCDase I and II on SDS-PAGE are not due to the heterogeneity with N-glycan. RBCDase II is partially stimulated by Ca(2+) and is inhibited by pyrimidine mono nucleotides such as TMP and UMP. This finding is significant as it demonstrates for the first time an effect by nucleotides on a CDase activity. The enzyme was also inhibited by both oxidized and reduced GSH. The effects of metal ions were examined, and we found that the enzyme is very sensitive to Hg(2+) and Fe(3+), while it is not affected by Mn(2+). EDTA was somewhat inhibitory at a 20mM concentration.  相似文献   

3.
Sphingosine is a structural component of sphingolipids. The metabolism of phosphoethanolamine ceramide (sphingomyelin) by sphingomyelinase (SMase), followed by the breakdown of ceramide by ceramidase (CDase) yields sphingosine. Female tsetse fly is viviparous and generates a single progeny within her uterus during each gonotrophic cycle. The mother provides her offspring with nutrients required for development solely via intrauterine lactation. Quantitative PCR showed that acid smase1 (asmase1) increases in mother's milk gland during lactation. aSMase1 was detected in the milk gland and larval gut, indicating this protein is generated during lactation and consumed by the larva. The higher levels of SMase activity in larval gut contents indicate that this enzyme is activated by the low gut pH. In addition, cdase is expressed at high levels in the larval gut. Breakdown of the resulting ceramide is likely accomplished by the larval gut-secreted CDase, which allows absorption of sphingosine. We used the tsetse system to understand the critical role(s) of SMase and CDase during pregnancy and lactation and their downstream effects on adult progeny fitness. Reduction of asmase1 by short interfering RNA negatively impacted pregnancy and progeny performance, resulting in a 4-5-day extension in pregnancy, 10%-15% reduction in pupal mass, lower pupal hatch rates, impaired heat tolerance, reduced symbiont levels, and reduced fecundity of adult progeny. This study suggests that the SMase activity associated with tsetse lactation and larval digestion is similar in function to that of mammalian lactation and represents a critical process for juvenile development, with important effects on the health of progeny during their adulthood.  相似文献   

4.
M Mylvaganam  L Meng  C A Lingwood 《Biochemistry》1999,38(33):10885-10897
Two types of oxidative cleavage of the double bond of glycosphingolipids (GSLs) are described. Oxidation of peracetylated GSL precursors with stoichiometric proportions of KMnO4 and an excess of NaIO4, in a neutral aqueous tert-butanol solvent system, gave nearly quantitative yields of the glycosyl ceramide acid, 2-hydroxy-3-(N-acyl)-4-(O-glycosyl)oxybutyric acid [Mylvaganam, M., and Lingwood, C. A. (1999) J. Biol. Chem. 274, 20725-20732]. However, if the reaction medium was made alkaline, the hydroxyallylic function of the sphingolipid, as a whole, was oxidized and the glycosyl serine acid, 2-(N-acyl)-3-(O-glycosyl)oxypropionic acid, was obtained in good yield. This represents a new type of oxidation reaction. Optimized conditions gave glycosyl ceramide or serine acids with greater than 90% selectivity and in good yields (90%). Oxidation of dGSLs gave serine and ceramide oligosaccharides, devoid of hydrocarbon chains. An intriguing glycosyl species containing 5-hydroxy-4-oxo-3-hydroxy-2-(N-acyl)sphingosine (hydroxy-acyl intermediate) was identified via ESMS analyses. We propose that further oxidation of this intermediate is pH-dependent and will be oxidized to either serine or ceramide acids. On the basis of MS-MS analysis of specific homologues of serine and ceramide acids, two types of collision-induced dissociation (CID) patterns have been established. These CID patterns were then used in the identification of serine and ceramide acids synthesized from natural GSL samples. Also, on a qualitative basis, this oxidation protocol, in conjunction with ESMS, provides a novel method for characterizing the aglycone composition (acyl chain length, unsaturation position, dihydrosphingosine content, etc.) of natural GSLs. A novel class of neohydrocarbon conjugates were synthesized by coupling the acids to rigid hydrocarbon frames such as 2-aminoadamantane. Preliminary studies with conjugates derived from globotriaosyl ceramide (Gb3C), lactosyl ceramide (LC), and galactosyl ceramide (GalC) bound verotoxin with the expected specificity but with affinities much greater than that of the natural glycolipid. Also, the ceramide acid-based conjugates were better ligands than serine acid conjugates.  相似文献   

5.
Ceramidases catalyze the conversion of ceramide to sphingosine. They are acylaminohydrolases that catalyze the deacylation of the amide-linked saturated fatty acid from ceramide to generate sphingosine. They also catalyze the reverse reaction of ceramide biosynthesis using sphingosine and fatty acid. In mammals, different proteins catalyze these reactions while individually exhibiting optimal activity over a narrow pH range and have been accordingly called acid, neutral, and alkaline ceramidases. Several genes encode for variants of alkaline ceramidase in mammals. Brainwashing (Bwa) is the only putative alkaline ceramidase homologue present in Drosophila. In this study we have demonstrated that BWA does not exhibit ceramidase activity and that bwa null mutants display no loss of ceramidase activity. Instead, the neutral ceramidase gene CDase encodes the protein that is responsible for all measurable ceramidase activity in Drosophila. Our studies show strong genetic interaction of Bwa with CDase and the Drosophila ceramide kinase gene (DCERK). We show that, although BWA is unlikely to be a ceramidase, it is a regulator of sphingolipid flux in Drosophila. Bwa exhibits strong genetic interaction with other genes coding for ceramide-metabolizing enzymes. This interaction might partly explain its original identification as a ceramidase.  相似文献   

6.
Ceramidases (CDases) hydrolyze ceramide to sphingosine (SPH) and fatty acid. Pseudomonas CDase (pCDase) is a homolog of mammalian neutral ceramidases and may play roles in disease pathogenesis. In this study, pCDase was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli (E. coli). The expressed recombinant pCDase was solubilized by optimizing several factors, including culture medium, the concentration of isopropyl-beta-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG), temperature, and time of induction, which were identified to be critical for the optimal production of recombinant pCDase. The recombinant pCDase was purified using nickel-nitrilotriacetic acid affinity, phenyl-Sepharose, and Q-Sepharose column chromatography, which gave an overall yield of 0.45 mg/l purified protein of starting culture. The activity of the recombinant pCDase followed classical Michaelis-Menten kinetics, with optimum activity in the neutral pH range. Both the hydrolytic and the reverse activities of CDase were stimulated by calcium with an affinity constant (K(a)) of 1.5 microM. Kinetics studies showed that calcium caused a decrease of K(m) and an increase in V(max) of pCDase. Calcium and D-erythro-sphingosine caused significant changes in the near ultraviolet circular dichroism (CD) spectra and the changes were inhibited in the presence of EGTA. These results identify important interactions between calcium and pCDase, which may play an essential role in the interaction of pCDase and its substrate.  相似文献   

7.
Recently, we purified an alkaline ceramidase (CDase) of Pseudomonas aeruginosa and found that the enzyme catalyzed a reversible reaction in which the N-acyl linkage of ceramide was hydrolyzed or synthesized [J. Biol. Chem. 273 (1998) 14368-14373]. Here, we report the characterization of the reverse hydrolysis reaction of the CDase using a recombinant enzyme. The reverse hydrolysis reaction of the CDase was clearly distinguishable from the reaction of an acyl-coenzyme A (CoA) dependent N-acyltransferase, because the CDase catalyzed the condensation of a free fatty acid to sphingosine (Sph) without cofactors but did not catalyze the transfer of a fatty acid from acyl-CoA to Sph. The reverse hydrolysis reaction proceeded most efficiently in the presence of 0.05% Triton X-100 at neutral pH, while the hydrolysis reaction tended to be favored with an increase in the concentration of the detergent at alkaline pH. The specificity of the reverse reaction for fatty acids is quite broad; saturated and unsaturated fatty acids were efficiently condensed to Sph. In contrast, the stereo-specificity of the reverse reaction for the sphingoid bases is very strict; the D-erythro form of Sph, not the L-erythro or D/L-threo one, was only acceptable for the reverse reaction. Chemical modification of the enzyme protein affected or did not affect both the hydrolysis and reverse reactions to the same extent, suggesting that the two reactions are catalyzed at the same catalytic domain.  相似文献   

8.
Tissue factor is a lipoprotein, expressed on the surface of cells, which binds coagulation Factor VII or VIIa, leading to activation of Factors X and IX with subsequent fibrin generation. Cellular tissue factor activity is important in pathophysiologic processes such as inflammation and disseminated intravascular coagulation. In this study, the long-chain base sphingosine inhibited coagulation initiated by lipopolysaccharide-stimulated intact human monocytes. Sphingosine (5-100 microM) also profoundly inhibited thromboplastin-initiated coagulation (greater than 90% decrease in thromboplastin activity). This inhibition was dose- and time-dependent. Sphingosine inhibited neither the intrinsic pathway of coagulation nor thrombin generation of fibrin. The sphingosine analogues sphingomyelin, ceramide, or N-acetylsphingosine did not affect thromboplastin activity, suggesting that the polar head of sphingosine was necessary for interaction of the molecule with the coagulation system. Investigation of the biochemical mechanism revealed that sphingosine (5-50 microM), but neither sphingomyelin nor ceramide, inhibited specific binding of radiolabeled Factor VII to lipopolysaccharide-stimulated intact monocytes. The results suggest that sphingosine may regulate monocyte tissue factor-initiated coagulation by modulating Factor VII binding to tissue factor. Sphingosine may represent a new class of inhibitors of hemostasis.  相似文献   

9.
We report the results of a systematic study of the effects of pharmacological agents known to cause or modify physiological cell death (PCD). Using WEHI 231 cells as a model, we investigated the effects of dexamethasone, cAMP, selected growth factors/ cytokines, DNA damaging agents, metabolic inhibitors and lipid mediators. We found that WEHI 231 cells are not affected by cAMP(1-90 microM) or TGFbeta (1-50 ng/ml), both of which are known to induce PCD in other systems. We also failed to detect protection from PCD in WEHI 231 cells cultured with Zn(++), E64 and leupeptin. In contrast, dexamethasone (400 microg/ml), etoposide (10(-4)M), emetine (10(-5)M), calyculin (10(-5)M), sphingosine (8-16 microM) and ceramide (20-40 microM) all cause PCD in WEHI 231 cells. The effects of ceramide can be blocked by LPS but not by overexpression of bcl2.The role of killer lipids in PCD is discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Recent studies suggest the existence of a signal transduction pathway involving sphingomyelin and derivatives (Kolesnick, R. N. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 7617-7623). The present studies compare effects of ceramide, sphingosine, and N,N-dimethylsphingosine on epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor phosphorylation in A431 human epidermoid carcinoma cells. To increase ceramide solubility, a ceramide containing octanoic acid at the second position (C8-cer) was synthesized. C8-cer induced time- and concentration-dependent EGF receptor phosphorylation. This event was detectable by 2 min and maximal by 10 min. As little as 0.1 microM C8-cer was effective, and 3 microM C8-cer induced maximal phosphorylation to 1.9-fold of control. EGF (20 nM) increased phosphorylation to 2.1-fold of control. Sphingosine stimulated receptor phosphorylation over the same concentration range (0.03-3 microM) and to the same extent (1.8-fold of control) as ceramide. The effects of C8-cer and sphingosine were similar by three separate criteria, phosphoamino acid analysis, anti-phosphotyrosine antibody immunoblotting, and phosphopeptide mapping by high performance liquid chromatography. Phosphorylation occurred specifically on threonine residues. N,N-Dimethylsphingosine, a potential derivative of sphingosine, was less effective. Since sphingosine and ceramide are interconvertible, the level of each compound was measured under conditions sufficient for EGF receptor phosphorylation. C8-cer (0.1-1 microM) induced dose-responsive elevation of cellular ceramide from 132 to 232 pmol.10(6) cells-1. In contrast, cellular sphingosine levels did not rise. This suggests that C8-cer acts without conversion to sphingosine. Exogenous sphingosine (0.1-1 microM) also increased cellular ceramide levels to 227 pmol.10(6) cells-1, but did not increase its own cellular level of 12 pmol.10(6) cells-1. Higher sphingosine concentrations that induced no further increase in EGF receptor phosphorylation produced very large elevations in cellular sphingosine. Hence, at effective concentrations, both compounds elevated cellular ceramide but not sphingosine levels. Additional studies performed with [3H]sphingosine demonstrated that cells contain substantially less N,N-dimethylsphingosine than free sphingosine and, during short term incubation, convert less than 5% of added sphingosine to N,N-dimethylsphingosine. These studies provide evidence that ceramide may have bioeffector properties and suggest sphingosine may act in part by conversion to ceramide.  相似文献   

11.
12.
13.
In this study, the intracellular signaling mechanisms through which TNFalpha increases LDH(A4) activity/expression in primary cultures of porcine testicular Sertoli cells were investigated. Studies were focused on sphingomyelin hydrolysis pathway. Treatment of [(14)C]serine-labeled cells with TNFalpha (15 ng/ml, 0.8 nM) resulted in a transient decrease (approximately 20%) in cellular [(14)C]sphingomyelin and in an increase (approximately 27%) in [(14)C]sphingosine that remained elevated for at least 75 min. In the same experiments, no significant changes were detected in ceramide levels. Exogenous sphingosine stimulated LDH(A4) activity and LDHA expression in a dose-dependent manner (ED(50) = 8 microM of sphingosine). Such an increase in LDHA messenger RNA levels and LDH(A4) activity was detected at 24 h and was maximal after 48 h of treatment. Kinetically, the increase in LDH(A4) activity was similar whether Sertoli cells were treated with sphingosine (12 microM) or with TNFalpha (20 ng/ml). Although sphingosine mimicked the action of TNFalpha on Sertoli cells LDH(A4) activity and expression, the maximal stimulatory effect represented about 30% of TNFalpha maximal activity. Sphingomyelinase, C2 ceramide, sphingosine 1-phosphate, N, N-dimethylsphingosine, and phosphorylcholine had no significant effect on LDHA expression/LDH(A4) activity. Exogenous C2 ceramide increased LDH(A4) activity only in cytokine-treated cells, suggesting its involvement as sphingosine precursor in TNFalpha-stimulated LDH(A4) activity via the sphingomyelin hydrolysis pathway. The LDH(A4) activity stimulated by TNFalpha was decreased by 36.2% by an inhibitor of sphingosine formation, NH4Cl (4 mM), supporting a role of sphingosine in the TNFalpha effect. Moreover, bisindolylmaleimide (100 nM), a protein kinase C (PKC) inhibitor decreased significantly by 28.7% the TNFalpha effect on LDH(A4) activity but had no effect on the stimulating action of sphingosine, suggesting that if PKC is involved in TNFalpha action, the sphingosine effect on LDH(A4) is unrelated to the PKC activity or inhibition. Together, the present data suggest that in primary Sertoli cell cultures, TNFalpha stimulating action on LDHA expression is partly exerted via sphingomyelin hydrolysis pathway, sphingosine being the active metabolite.  相似文献   

14.
Acid ceramidase (N-acylsphingosine amidohydrolase) is the lysosomal enzyme required to hydrolyze the N-acyl linkage between the fatty acid and sphingosine moieties in ceramide. A deficiency of acid ceramidase activity results in the lipid storage disorder, Farber disease. This study reports a new assay method to detect acid ceramidase activity in vitro using Bodipy or lissamine rhodamine-conjugated ceramide (C12 ceramide; dodecanoylsphingosine). Using mouse kidney extracts as the source of acid ceramidase activity, this new method was compared with an assay using radioactive C12 ceramide (N-[(14)C]-dodecanoylsphingosine) as a substrate. The Bodipy C12 ceramide substrate provided data very similar to those of the radioactive substrate, but under the experimental conditions tested, it was significantly more sensitive. Using Bodipy C12 ceramide, femtomole quantities of the product, Bodipy dodecanoic acid, could be detected, providing an accurate measure of acid ceramidase activity as low as 0.1 pmol/mg protein/h. Acid ceramidase activities in skin fibroblasts and EBV-transformed lymphoblasts from Farber disease patients were around 7.8 and 10% of those in normal cells, respectively, confirming the specificity of this new assay method. Based on these results, we suggest that this fluorescence-based, high-performance liquid chromatographic technique is a reliable, rapid, and highly sensitive method to determine acid ceramidase activity, and that it could be useful wherever the in vitro detection of acid ceramidase activity is of importance.  相似文献   

15.
Ceramide is a component of the sphingomyelin cycle and a well-established lipid signaling molecule. We recently reported that ceramide specifically increased ABCA1-mediated cholesterol efflux to apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I), a critical process that leads to the formation of cardioprotective HDL. In this report, we characterize the structural features of ceramide required for this effect. C2 dihydroceramide, which contains a fully saturated acyl chain and is commonly used as a negative control for ceramide apoptotic signaling, stimulated a 2- to 5-fold increase in ABCA1-mediated cholesterol efflux to apoA-I over a 0-60 muM concentration range without the cell toxicity apparent with native C2 ceramide. Compared with C2 ceramide, C6 and C8 ceramides with medium-length N-acyl chains showed a similar extent of efflux stimulation (a 2- to 5-fold increase) but at a higher onset concentration than the less hydrophobic C2 ceramide. In contrast, the reduced and methylated ceramide analogs, N,N-dimethyl sphingosine and N,N,N-trimethyl sphingosine, failed to stimulate cholesterol efflux. We found that changes in the native spatial orientation at either of two chiral carbon centers (or both) resulted in an approximately 50% decrease compared with native ceramide-stimulated cholesterol efflux. These data show that the overall ceramide shape and the amide bond are critical for the cholesterol efflux effect and suggest that ceramide acts through a protein-mediated pathway to affect ABCA1 activity.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Ceramide stimulates a cytosolic protein phosphatase.   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
A sphingomyelin cycle has been identified whereby the action of certain extracellular agents results in reversible sphingomyelin hydrolysis and the concomitant generation of ceramide. Moreover, a cell-permeable ceramide, C2-ceramide (N-acetylsphingosine), is a potent modulator of cell proliferation and differentiation. We report herein that C2-ceramide, C6-ceramide, and natural ceramides activate a cytosolic serine/threonine protein phosphatase in a dose-dependent manner. Initial activation is observed at concentrations of ceramide as low as 0.1 microM with peak response occurring at 5-10 microM. However, other closely related sphingolipids, sphingosine and sphingomyelin, were largely inactive. Ceramide-stimulated phosphatase was inhibited by okadaic acid, an inhibitor of protein phosphatases, with an IC50 of 0.1-1 nM, depending on the concentration of ceramide. Ceramide-stimulated phosphatase was insensitive to Mg2+ and Mn2+ cations. Using sequential anion exchange chromatography, ceramide-stimulated phosphatase activity could be resolved from ceramide-nonresponsive phosphatases. The activity of partially purified enzyme was stimulated 3.5-fold by ceramide. The identification of a phosphatase as a molecular target for the action of ceramide defines a novel intracellular signaling pathway with potential roles in the regulation of cell proliferation and differentiation.  相似文献   

18.
Ceramide is an important lipid signaling molecule and a key intermediate in sphingolipid biosynthesis. Recent studies have implied a previously unappreciated role for the ceramide N-acyl chain length, inasmuch as ceramides containing specific fatty acids appear to play defined roles in cell physiology. The discovery of a family of mammalian ceramide synthases (CerS), each of which utilizes a restricted subset of acyl-CoAs for ceramide synthesis, strengthens this notion. We now report the characterization of mammalian CerS2. qPCR analysis reveals that CerS2 mRNA is found at the highest level of all CerS and has the broadest tissue distribution. CerS2 has a remarkable acyl-CoA specificity, showing no activity using C16:0-CoA and very low activity using C18:0, rather utilizing longer acyl-chain CoAs (C20-C26) for ceramide synthesis. There is a good correlation between CerS2 mRNA levels and levels of ceramide and sphingomyelin containing long acyl chains, at least in tissues where CerS2 mRNA is expressed at high levels. Interestingly, the activity of CerS2 can be regulated by another bioactive sphingolipid, sphingosine 1-phosphate (S1P), via interaction of S1P with two residues that are part of an S1P receptor-like motif found only in CerS2. These findings provide insight into the biochemical basis for the ceramide N-acyl chain composition of cells, and also reveal a novel and potentially important interplay between two bioactive sphingolipids that could be relevant to the regulation of sphingolipid metabolism and the opposing functions that these lipids play in signaling pathways.  相似文献   

19.
Prior studies demonstrated that ceramide was phosphorylated by a novel Ca(2+)-dependent kinase distinct from diacylglycerol (DG) kinase in human myelogenous leukemia (HL-60) cells (Kolesnick, R. N., and Hemer, M. R. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 10900-10904). The present studies were initiated to determine whether mammalian DG kinase purified to homogeneity possessed phosphotransferase activity toward ceramide. A high molecular weight rat brain DG kinase demonstrated Mg(2+)-(but not Ca(2+)-) dependent DG kinase activity and did not phosphorylate ceramide in the presence of either cation. In contrast, ceramide served as a competitive inhibitor with an inhibition constant (Ki) 2-6-fold greater than the Km for DG. Inhibition was noncompetitive with respect to ATP and Mg2+. A cell-permeable ceramide, N-octanoyl sphingosine (C8-cer), was used to study effects of ceramide on DG kinase in intact HL-60 cells. C8-cer induced dose- and time-dependent increases in cellular DG levels. As little as 1 microM C8-cer increased DG from a basal level of 103 to 177 pmol.10(6) cells-1, and a maximal 2.9-fold elevation to 292 pmol.10(6) cells-1 occurred with 10 microM C8-cer. DG elevation was detected after 1 min, maximal by 7.5 min, and sustained for 30 min. The DG elevation was accompanied by a reduction in 32P incorporation in phosphatidic acid in cells short term-labeled with [32P]orthophosphoric acid, consistent with inhibition of DG kinase. In contrast, a similar elevation in the DG level induced by exogenous phospholipase C increased 32P incorporation into phosphatidic acid. C8-cer was not metabolized to sphingomyelin, indicating that DG was not generated through the phosphatidylcholine:ceramide cholinephosphotransferase reaction. DG elevation after C8-cer or phospholipase C treatment was sufficient to redistribute protein kinase C from cytosol to membrane. These findings provide evidence that ceramide may serve as a competitive inhibitor of DG kinase.  相似文献   

20.
Mouse monoclonal antibody AA4 inhibits the binding of IgE to high affinity IgE receptors on the rat basophilic leukemia cell line RBL-2H3. As shown by immunostaining of thin layer chromatograms, antibody AA4 binds avidly to two disialogangliosides (antigen I and antigen II) that occur in this cell line. The two antigens were purified by anion exchange chromatography followed by short-bed continuous thin-layer chromatography. About 230 micrograms of antigen I and 60 micrograms of antigen II were obtained from 20 g (wet weight) of leukemia cells. The structures of both purified antigens were determined to be alpha-galactosyl derivatives of the ganglioside GD1b by fast atom bombardment-mass spectrometry, by chemical ionization-mass spectrometry of permethylated samples, by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry of partially methylated alditol acetates, and by treatment with exoglycosidases and mild acid hydrolysis. The structure of antigen I is: (formula; see text) Antigen II has an additional alpha-galactosyl residue as follows: (formula; see text) The ceramide of antigen I contains approximately equal amounts of C24:0, C22:0, C20:0, C18:0, and C16:0 N-acyl fatty acids. The ceramide base is predominantly sphingosine along with a small amount of dihydrosphingosine. In contrast, the ceramide of antigen II contains mainly C24:0 N-acyl fatty acid with much lower amounts of C22:0, C20:0, and C18:0 fatty acids. Moreover, the ceramide base is approximately 55% sphingosine and 45% dihydrosphingosine. No unsaturated N-acyl fatty acids were detected in either antigen.  相似文献   

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