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1.
The structural analysis of high mannose-type Asn-linked (N-linked) oligosaccharides of the human transferrin receptor (hTR) from D-[2-3H]mannose metabolic-radiolabeled human cells--A431, K562, BeWo, and HL60--was investigated. The radiolabeled hTR glycopeptides were prepared and fractionated by a lectin chromatography of Concanavalin A-Sepharose. The composition analysis of hTR glycopeptides revealed that Con A-I contains both mannose and fucose, whereas Con A-III has mannose exclusively. The Con A-III glycopeptides were treated with Endo H. The released oligosaccharides were charge-fractionated by QAE-Sephadex. The neutral oligosaccharides were further size-fractionated by an amine absorption high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). Our results demonstrate that the high mannose-type oligosaccharides of hTR ranged in size from Man5-R to Man9-R with cell-type specific patterns. A relative amount of each component was found to be differentially heterogeneous among the four different human cell lines.  相似文献   

2.
Oligosaccharide chains of herpes simplex virus type 2 glycoprotein gG.2   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
gG.2 glycoprotein was purified by H966 monoclonal antibodies linked to Sepharose from herpes simplex virus type 2-infected HEp-2 cells labeled with [3H] glucosamine. The glycoprotein was subjected to Pronase digestion and the glycopeptides were fractionated by Con A-Sepharose in a major fraction (88.5% of total radioactivity) unbound to the lectin gel and in a minor species which bound to the lectin as a N-linked diantennary oligosaccharide. Mild and strong acid hydrolysis of Con A-unbound and Con A-bound fractions revealed that (i) both species were highly sialylated; (ii) the Con A-unbound fraction contained mainly labeled N-acetylgalactosamine, as is the case for O-linked oligosaccharides; and (iii) the Con A-bound fraction carried the vast majority of the labeled N-acetylglucosamine present in gG.2. Three size classes of oligosaccharides were separated from mild alkaline borohydride-treated Con A-unbound glycopeptides, which accounted for about 80% of the radioactivity present in the fraction. Galactosaminitol was recovered as the major labeled product in the strong acid hydrolyzates of the oligosaccharides generated by reductive beta-elimination, indicating that they were O-glycosidically linked to the peptide backbone. Thin-layer and DEAE-Sephacel chromatography of the three O-linked oligosaccharide species indicated that disialylated tetrasaccharides and monosialylated trisaccharides were the major components, whereas neutral disaccharide was a minor component. Digestion with neuraminidase and beta-galactosidase of the O-linked oligosaccharides supported the idea that the common disaccharide core was mainly of the structure beta-galactosyl-N-acetylgalactosamine. The large occurrence of O-linked oligosaccharides differentiates this type 2-specific herpes simplex virus glycoprotein from the type-common herpesvirus glycoproteins gB, gC, and gD.  相似文献   

3.
小鼠Lewis肺癌组织经氯仿甲醇去除脂类,用木瓜蛋白酶消化,再经Sephadex柱层析分离得到总糖肽。它有明显地抑制小鼠Lewis肺癌细胞,S180肉瘤细胞及人巨细胞肺癌细胞与层粘连蛋白(Laminin,LN)基质粘着的作用;对层粘连蛋白受体(LN-R)与其配体的识别及结合也具有同样明显的阻断效应。糖肽的上述作用均具有剂量依赖性。进一步经ConA-Sepharose CL-4B亲和层析将总糖肽分为三个部分。与ConA不结合的糖肽部分对Lewis肺癌细胞与LN基质的粘着也具有剂量性抑制作用。  相似文献   

4.
The carbohydrate portion of the G glycoprotein of vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) grown in CHO cells (CHO/VSV) has been fractionated on BioGelP6, concanavalin A-Sepharose, and pea lectin-agarose. The results suggest that, in addition to sialic acid and fucose heterogeneity, the asparagine-linked complex carbohydrate moieties of CHO/VSV also display branching heterogeneity. Although the majority of the glycopeptides bind to concanavalin A-Sepharose in a manner typical of certain biantennary carbohydrate structures, a significant proportion do not bind to the lectin. The latter behavior is typical of tri- or tetraantennary (branched) carbohydrate structures. The CHO/VSV glycopeptides which do not bind to concanavalin A-Sepharose separate into bound and unbound fractions on pea lectin-agarose suggesting that they include at least two different types of (branched) carbohydrate structures. Glycopeptides from the G glycoprotein of VSV grown in two, independently derived CHO glycosylation mutants which belong to complementation group 4 (Lec4 mutants) were examined in the same manner. In contrast to glycopeptides from CHO/VSV, glycopeptides from Lec4/VSV which passed through concanavalin A-Sepharose did not contain a component which subsequently bound to pea lectin-agarose. A glycopeptide fraction with these lectin-binding properties was also missing from cell surface glycopeptides derived from Lec4 cells. The combined results are consistent with the hypothesis that Lec4 CHO glycosylation mutants lack a glycosyltransferase activity responsible for the addition of a (branch) N-acetylglucosamine residue linked β1,6 to mannose.  相似文献   

5.
D K Mandal  C F Brewer 《Biochemistry》1992,31(50):12602-12609
We have previously demonstrated that the interactions between branched chain oligosaccharides and glycopeptides isolated from glycoproteins and glycolipids with specific lectins lead to the formation of homopolymeric carbohydrate-protein cross-linked complexes, even in the presence of mixtures of the carbohydrates or lectins [cf. Bhattacharyya, L., Fant, J., Lonn, H., & Brewer, C. F. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 7523-7530]. Recently, we have shown that highly ordered cross-linked lattices are formed between the tetrameric glycoprotein soybean agglutinin (SBA), which possesses a Man9 oligomannose chain per monomer, and the Glc/Man-specific plant lectin concanavalin A (Con A) [Khan, M. I., Mandal, D. K., & Brewer, C. F. (1991) Carbohydr. Res. 213, 69-77]. Using radiolabeling and quantitative precipitation techniques, we show in the present study that Con A binds and forms unique cross-linked complexes with four different glycoproteins having different numbers and types of carbohydrate chains as well as different quaternary structures. The glycoproteins include quail ovalbumin, Lotus tetragonolobus isolectin A (LTL-A), Erythrina cristagalli lectin (ECL), and Erythrina corallodendron lectin (EcorL). The results show that a preparation of quail ovalbumin containing either one Man7 or Man8 oligomannose chain per molecule forms a 1:2 cross-linked complex with tetrameric Con A, thereby demonstrating bivalency of the single carbohydrate chain(s) on the glycoprotein. Tetrameric LTL-A and dimeric ECL, which possess two xylose-containing carbohydrate chains per monomer, both form 1:2 and 1:1 cross-linked complexes (per monomer) of glycoprotein to lectin, depending on their relative ratios in solution. However, dimeric EcorL, which has the same carbohydrate structure and number of chains as ECL, forms only a 1:2 cross-linked complex with tetrameric Con A.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
HLA class II molecules have been isolated from a [3H]mannose-labeled GM3104 B lymphoblastoid cell line with the phenotype DQw1, DR1. The DQw1 molecules were purified by affinity to 77-34 IgG specifically reactive with the DQw1 specificity. The DR1 molecules were separated into two subsets, DR1a (70 to 80%) and DR1b (20 to 30%), by sequential affinity to 21r5-IgG and 21w4-IgG Sepharose. The alpha- and beta-chains of [3H]mannose-labeled DQw1, DR1a, and DR1b molecules were separated by SDS-PAGE and were recovered by electrophoretic elution. The isolated chains were digested with pronase and the glycopeptides were fractionated by sequential lectin chromatography on immobilized concanavalin A (Con A), Lens culinaris (Lens), and Ricinus communis agglutinin type I (RCA). The N-linked glycopeptides derived from the alpha-chains of DQw1, DR1a, or DR1b showed similar profiles on Con A Sepharose: 45% unbound (ConA I), 25% weakly bound (ConA II), and 30% tightly bound (ConA III). The glycopeptides derived from the beta-chains of DQw1 or DR1 molecules were found almost exclusively (80%) in the fraction unbound to Con A Sepharose, with only 11% and 9% in ConA II and ConA III fractions, respectively. The observation that most of the binding to Con A is associated with the alpha-chain glycopeptides suggests that binding of membrane-associated class II molecules to that lectin must be mediated by the alpha-chains. Binding to Lens Sepharose was higher for beta-(50%) than for alpha-(15%) chain glycopeptides, suggesting that within the intact glycoproteins, the beta-chains are responsible for the interaction with Lens. The ConA I fractions derived from the alpha-chain glycopeptides of either DQw1 or DR1 molecules were separated on RCA-agarose as follows: 60% unbound, 17% retarded, and 20% bound and eluted with 0.1 M galactose. The ConA I fractions derived from the beta-chain glycopeptides of either subset of class II molecules also had a similar profile on RCA-agarose: 70% unbound, 16% retarded, and 10% bound and eluted specifically. After removal of sialic acid residues, all of the ConA I fractions of alpha- and beta-chains bound to RCA-agarose. A high degree of similarity was observed between the corresponding glycopeptides of the three subsets of class II molecules and between the complex N-linked structures of alpha- and beta-chains. Minor variations were observed between DR1a and DR1b glycopeptides which appear greater than those observed between DR1 and DQw1 glycopeptides.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
The transferrin receptor of bloodstream form Trypanosoma brucei is a heterodimer encoded by expression site associated genes 6 and 7. This low-abundance glycoprotein with a single glycosylphosphatidylinositol membrane anchor and eight potential N-glycosylation sites is located in the flagellar pocket. The receptor is essential for the parasite, providing its only source of iron by scavenging host transferrin from the bloodstream. Here, we demonstrate that both receptor subunits contain endoglycosidase H-sensitive and endoglycosidase H-resistant N-glycans. Lectin blotting of the purified receptor and structural analysis of the released N-glycans revealed oligomannose and paucimannose structures but, contrary to previous suggestions, no poly-N-acetyllactosamine structures were found. Overlay experiments suggest that the receptor can bind to other trypanosome glycoproteins, which may explain this discrepancy. Nevertheless, these data suggest that a current model, in which poly-N-acetyllactosamine glycans are directly involved in receptor-mediated endocytosis in bloodstream form Trypanosoma brucei, should be revised. Sequential endoglycosidase H and peptide-N-glycosidase F treatment, followed by tryptic peptide analysis, allowed the mapping of oligomannose and paucimannose structures to four of the receptor N-glycosylation sites. These results are discussed with respect to the current model for protein N-glycosylation in the parasite. Finally, the glycosylation data allowed the creation of a molecular model for the parasite transferrin receptor. This model, when placed in the context of a model for the dense variant surface glycoprotein coat in which it is embedded, suggests that receptor N-glycosylation may play an important role in providing sufficient space for the approach and binding of transferrin to the receptor, without significantly disrupting the continuity of the protective variant surface glycoprotein coat.  相似文献   

8.
Ascitic fluid haptoglobins 1-1, 2-1 and 2-2 and their tryptic glycopeptides were fractionated by affinity chromatography on Con A-Sepharose. Three peaks were obtained, corresponding to non-binding, weakly binding and strongly binding fractions. Concanavalin A-non-binding and concanavalin A-binding fractions of haptoglobin and of glycopeptide III 2-2 consisted of a series of polymers with increasing molecular mass, except for the non-binding fraction of glycopeptide III 1-1. After reduction there was no difference between the subunit composition of the glycopeptides and their concanavalin A fraction. Concanavalin A-non-binding fractions from haptoglobin 2-1 and glycopeptides III 1-1 and III 2-2 did not form an active complex with hemoglobin and, in crossed immunodiffusion, showed a reaction of partial identity with haptoglobin 2-1, glycopeptides III 1-1, III 2-2 and their concanavalin A-binding fractions. Concanavalin A-binding fractions of the above preparations exhibited with hemoglobin higher peroxidase activity than before their separation on Con A-Sepharose and immunodiffusion gave a reaction of identity among themselves and with unfractionated preparations. The concanavalin A-binding glycopeptide III is the biologically active part of the haptoglobin beta-chain.  相似文献   

9.
The affinity of concanavalin A (Con A) for simple saccharides has been known for over 50 years. However, the specificity of binding of Con A with cell-surface related carbohydrates has only recently been examined in detail. Brewer and coworkers [J Biol Chem (1986) 261:7306–10; J Biol Chem (1987) 262:1288–93; J Biol Chem (1987) 262:1294–99] have recently studied the binding interactions of a series of oligomannose and bisected hybrid type glycopeptides and complex type glycopeptides and oligosaccharides with Con A. The relative affinities of the carbohydrates were determined using hemagglutination inhibition measurements, and their modes of binding to the lectin examined by nuclear magnetic relaxation dispersion (NMRD) spectroscopy and quantitative precipitation analyses. The equivalence zones (regions of maximum precipitation) of the precipitin curves of Con A and the carbohydrates indicate that certain oligomannose and bisected hybrid type glycopeptides are bivalent for lectin binding. From the NMRD and precipitation data, two protein binding sites on each glycopeptide have been identified and characterized. Certain bisected complex type oligosaccharides also bind and precipitate Con A, while the corresponding nonbisected analogs bind but do not precipitate the protein. The precipitation data indicate that the bisected complex type oligosaccharides are also bivalent for lectin binding, while the nonbisected analogs are univalent. The NMRD and precipitation data are consistent with different mechanisms of binding of nonbisected and bisected complex type carbohydrates to Con A, including different conformations of the bound saccharides.Abbreviations Con A Concanavalin A with unspecified metal ion content - CMPL Con A with Mn2+ and Ca2+ at the S1 and S2 sites respectively, in the locked conformation [12]; trisaccharide1, 3,6-di-O-(-d-mannopyranosyl)-d-mannose - -MDM methyl -d-mannopyranoside - NMRD nuclear magnetic relaxation dispersion, the magnetic field dependence of nuclear magnetic relaxation rates, in the present case, the longitudinal relaxation rate, 1/T1, of solvent protons  相似文献   

10.
Rat liver -glucuronidase was studied by sequential lectin affinity chromatography. -Glucuronidase glycopeptides were obtained by extensive Pronase digestion followed byN-[14C]acetylation and desialylation by neuraminidase treatment. According to the distribution of the radioactivity in the various fractions obtained by chromatography on different lectins, and on the assumption that all glycopeptides were acetylated to the same specific radioactivity, a relative distribution of glycan structure types is proposed. The presence of complex biantennary and oligomannose type glycans (56.8% and 42.7%, respectively) was indicated by Concanavalin A-Sepharose chromatography.Ulex europaeus agglutinin-agarose chromatography revealed the presence of (1-3) linked fucose in some of the complex biantennary type glycans (16.6% of the total glycopeptides). Wheat germ agglutinin chromatography indicated that the minority (0.5%) were hybrid or poly (N-acetyllactosamine) type glycans. Furthermore, the absence of O-glycans, tri-, tetra- and bisected biantennary type glycans was demonstrated by analysis of Concanavalin A-Sepharose unbound fraction by chromatography on immobilized soybean agglutinin,Ricinus communis agglutinin andPhaseolus vulgaris erythroagglutinin.  相似文献   

11.
The murine transferrin receptor is a disulphide-linked dimer with three N-glycosylation sites. We have investigated the structural and functional properties of the transferrin receptor from murine plasmacytoma cells (NS-1 cells) treated with the glycosylation inhibitor, tunicamycin and the glycosylation-processing inhibitors, swainsonine and castanospermine. 1. Tunicamycin (1 microgram/ml) inhibited mannose incorporation in NS-1 cells by greater than 90%, but also inhibited methionine incorporation by up to 50%. Both swainsonine (1 microgram/ml) and castanospermine (50 micrograms/ml) resulted in mannose incorporation greater than 100% of untreated cells and neither drug affected methionine incorporation. 2. Incubation of NS-1 cells with tunicamycin resulted in a shift in the apparent molecular mass of the transferrin receptor from 96 kDa and 94 kDa to approximately 82 kDa. 3. Peptide N-glycosidase F digestion of the receptor from untreated cells resulted in the fully deglycosylated 82 kDa component as well as an 87 kDa component which represents partially deglycosylated receptor resistant to peptide N-glycosidase F digestion. 4. The receptor from swainsonine-treated cells was equally sensitive to peptide N-glycosidase F and endo-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase H (endo H; resulting in both 87-kDa and 82-kDa components), whereas the receptor from castanospermine-treated cells was only partially sensitive to endo H. 5. Analysis of mannose- and fucose-labelled cellular glycopeptides by concanavalin-A--Sepharose chromatography showed that swainsonine (1 microgram/ml) treatment resulted in approximately 90% inhibition of the synthesis of complex N-glycans and an accumulation of fucosylated hybrid structures. In contrast, castanospermine (100 micrograms/ml) treatment resulted in only partial inhibition (60%) of the synthesis of complex N-glycans. 6. Analysis of the receptor from tunicamycin, swainsonine and castanospermine treated cells under nonreducing conditions showed a single component corresponding to the dimer, indicating that dimerisation of newly synthesised murine receptor is independent of carbohydrate. 7. The non-glycosylated receptor from tunicamycin-treated cells appears to bind transferrin as demonstrated by interaction with transferrin-Sepharose. 8. Surface expression of the receptor was not significantly altered in the presence of either swainsonine or castanospermine as judged by flow cytometry.  相似文献   

12.
This report describes the N-glycosylation site mapping of human serotransferrin (h-STF). Reduced and S-carboxymethylated h-STF was digested with trypsin or chymotrypsin. Glycopeptides in the proteolytic digests were isolated by serial concanavalin A (Con A), Sambucus nigra agglutinin (SNA), and Phaseolus vulgaris leukoagglutinin (LPHA) affinity chromatography and subjected to preliminary analysis by 1H NMR spectroscopy. The glycopeptide fractions were then individually digested with N-glycanase. One part of the digest of each fraction was analyzed by fast atom bombardment-mass spectrometry (FAB-MS) to identify the peptide sequences of the glycosylation sites. The other part was used to isolate the oligosaccharide by the corresponding lectin affinity chromatography and to characterize the structures of the isolated oligosaccharides by 1H NMR spectroscopy and FAB-MS. The oligosaccharides in the Con A-bound fraction were shown to have bi-alpha(2-->6)-sialyl, diantennary structures. The SNA-bound fraction was shown to contain trisialyl, triantennary structures. Di- and triantennary oligosaccharides were found to occur on each of the two N-glycosylation sites of h-STF (Asn413 and Asn611) in the ratio of approximately 85:15. The SNA-bound glycopeptides were further fractionated by LPHA affinity chromatography. Two different oligosaccharides were characterized, namely, a trisialyl 2,4-triantennary and a trisialyl 2,6-triantennary glycan. The ratio of 2,4-triantennary vs 2,6-triantennary oligosaccharides attached to glycosylation site Asn413 was found to be approximately 5:1, whereas the two isomeric triantennary oligosaccharides were found to be attached to glycosylation site Asn611 in the ratio approximately 1:1.  相似文献   

13.
From a fresh sample (1 kg) of cultivated red alga Kappaphycus striatum, three isolectins, KSA-1 (15.1 mg), KSA-2 (58.0 mg) and KSA-3 (6.9 mg), were isolated by a combination of extraction with aqueous ethanol, ethanol precipitation, and ion exchange chromatography. Isolated KSAs were monomeric proteins of about 28 kDa having identical 20 N-terminal amino acid sequences to each other. Their hemagglutination activities were not inhibited by monosaccharides, but inhibited by glycoproteins bearing high-mannose N-glycans. In a binding experiment with pyridylaminated oligosaccharides by centrifugal ultrafiltration-HPLC assay, the isolectin KSA-2 was exclusively bound to high-mannose type N-glycans, but not to other glycans. Including complex types and a pentasaccharide core of N-glycans, indicating that it recognized branched oligomannosides. The binding activity of KSA-2 was slightly different among high-mannose N-glycans examined, indicating that the lectin has a higher affinity for those having the exposed (α1-3) Man in the D2 arm. On the other hand, KSA-2 did not bind to a free oligomannose that is a constituent of the branched oligomannosides, implying that the portion of the core GlcNAc residue(s) of the N-glycans is also essential for binding. Thus, KSA-2 appears to recognize the extended carbohydrate structure with a minimal length of a tetrasaccharide, Man(α1-3)Man(α1-6)Man(β1-4)GlcNAc. This study indicates that K. striatum, which has extensively been cultivated as a source of carrageenan, is a good source of a valuable lectin(s) that is strictly specific for high-mannose N-glycans.  相似文献   

14.
The activity and substrate specificity of endo-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase [glycopeptide-D-mannosyl-N4-(N-acetyl-D-glucosaminyl)2-asparagine 1,4-N-acetyl-beta-glucosamino-hydrolase, EC 3.2.1.96] obtained from Mucor hiemalis (Endo-M) was compared with that of the enzyme obtained from Flavobacterium meningosepticum (Endo-F), which is the only enzyme available that acts on the complex oligosaccharides of asparagine-linked sugar chains in glycoproteins. They showed almost the same activities toward DNS-ovalbumin glycopeptide containing high-mannose and hybrid asparagine-linked oligosaccharides. However, Endo-M showed high activity towards DNS-asialotransferrin and DNS-transferrin glycopeptides, which contain complex biantennary oligosaccharides. Endo-M could weakly act even on DNS-asialofetuin glycopeptide containing complex triantennary oligosaccharides, while Endo-F could not. SDS-denatured asialotransferrin was deglycosylated by both enzymes in the presence of non-ionic detergent (NP-40) and EDTA, and the deglycosylated protein migrated to a lower molecular weight position than asialotransferrin on SDS-PAGE. However, even in the absence of detergent, Endo-M deglycosylated native asialotransferrin and transferrin. Deglycosylation of asialotransferrin was confirmed by means of Con A-Sepharose 4B column chromatography and SDS-PAGE.  相似文献   

15.
Baby-hamster kidney (BHK) cells were labelled metabolically by growth in media containing radioactive sugars and the asparagine-linked glycopeptides (N-glycans) obtained by Pronase digestion of disrupted cells were fractionated by chromatography on concanavalin A-Sepharose. About 2-3% of the total [3H]galactose- or [3H]fucose-labelled glycopeptides were found to be bound tightly to the lectin column and were eluted with 500 mM-methyl alpha-mannoside. Further analysis of these minor components by chromatography on Bio-Gel P4, lentil-lectin-Sepharose and DEAE-Sephacel and sensitivity to alpha-mannosidase indicates the presence in BHK-cell glycopeptides of hybrid structures of the following form: (Formula: see text) Similar structures were identified as major features of the glycoproteins of ricin-resistant mutants RicR17 and RicR19 as described previously for RicR21 cells [Hughes, Mills & Stojanovic (1983) Carbohydr. Res. 120, 215-234]. The RicR15 cell line also produces significant amounts of hybrid N-glycans. The studies show that the novel N-glycans accumulating in ricin-resistant mutants are derived by a metabolic pathway that exists to a minor extent in normal BHK cells.  相似文献   

16.
Laminin, a high molecular weight (1,000,000) glycoprotein component of basement membranes, was isolated from the EHS murine tumor as a noncovalent complex with entactin by lectin affinity chromatography using the alpha-D-galactosyl binding lectin Griffonia simplicifolia I (GS I). Entactin was removed from this complex by passage over Sephacryl S-1000 in the presence of SDS. Compositional analysis showed that the affinity-purified laminin contained 25-30% carbohydrate by weight. Methylation analysis revealed that the oligosaccharides of laminin contained bi- and triantennary chains, the blood group I structure, and repeating sequences of 3Gal beta 1,4GlcNAc beta 1 units. Free oligosaccharides were derived from the asparagine-linked glycans of affinity-purified laminin by hydrazinolysis, re-N-acetylation, and reduction with NaB3H4. When fractionated by affinity chromatography on concanavalin A (Con A)-Sepharose, 80% of the oligosaccharides passed through the column unretarded and a single peak corresponding to 20% of the oligosaccharides was adsorbed and specifically eluted with a linear gradient of 0-30 mM methyl alpha-D-glucopyranoside. Further fractionation of the Con A reactive oligosaccharides on GS I-Sepharose demonstrated that 70% of these oligosaccharides possess at least one terminal nonreducing alpha-D-galactopyranosyl unit. The Con A reactive oligosaccharides were subjected to sequential digestion with endo- and exoglycosidases, and the reaction products were analyzed by gel filtration chromatography on a column of Bio-Gel P4. We thereby obtained evidence for a variety of structures not previously reported to exist on murine laminin including hybrid biantennary complex and biantennary complex structures containing poly(lactosaminyl) repeating units. The poly(lactosaminyl) units occur either on one or on both branches of the biantennary chains, as well as in more highly branched blood group I poly(lactosamine) structures. All sialic acid is present as N-acetylneuraminic acid linked alpha 2,3 to galactose.  相似文献   

17.
The carbohydrate-binding properties of wheat-germ agglutinin (WGA) have been studied by using glycopeptides isolated from the cell surfaces of a cultured murine myeloid cell line (416B). The glycopeptides were passed through affinity columns of lentil lectin (LCA), concanavalin A (Con A) and WGA arranged in series so that material reaching the WGA column had failed to bind to LCA or Con A. WGA-binding glycopeptides were step-eluted with 0.01 M, 0.1 M and 0.5 M-N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc), to yield weak (WGA-W), intermediate (WGA-I) and strong (WGA-S) affinity fractions. WGA-W and WGA-I contained 'N'- and 'O'-linked oligosaccharides bound to separate polypeptides. WGA-S consisted almost entirely of N-linked components. Our analytical work was concentrated mainly on the N-linked fractions. In these carbohydrates WGA affinity was directly proportional to molecular size but inversely related to N-acetylneuraminic acid content. The binding of the weak-affinity fraction was dependent on N-acetylneuraminic acid, but the intermediate- and strong-binding species interacted with the lectin by N-acetylneuraminic acid-independent mechanisms. N-linked glycopeptides in each WGA-binding class were almost totally degraded to monosaccharides by the concerted action of the exoglycosidases neuraminidase, beta-galactosidase and beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase. Treatment with endo-beta-galactosidase caused partial depolymerization, yielding some disaccharides but also a heterogeneous population of partially degraded components. These findings suggest that WGA binds with high affinity to internal GlcNAc residues in large oligosaccharides containing repeat sequences of Gal beta(1----4)GlcNAc beta(1----3) (i.e. polylactosamine-type glycans). N-Acetylneuraminic acid is involved only in low-affinity interactions with WGA. WGA therefore displays an intricate pattern of saccharide specificities that can be profitably utilized for structural analysis of complex carbohydrates.  相似文献   

18.
Structures of the asparagine-linked sugar chains of laminin   总被引:13,自引:0,他引:13  
This investigation describes the isolation and characterization of oligosaccharides of the basement membrane glycoprotein, laminin. Pronase-released glycopeptides of isolated laminin, from a mouse Engelbreth-Holm-Swarm tumor, were fractionated using a combination of gel permeation chromatography and Con A-Sepharose affinity chromatography. The glycopeptides were analyzed for sugar linkage patterns by methylation analysis. Glycopeptides and hydrazine-released oligosaccharides were further analyzed using endo-beta-galactosidase, endo-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase H and specific exoglycosidases in conjunction with calibrated gel permeation chromatography. Based on these experiments, murine tumor laminin was shown to contain asparagine-linked oligosaccharides with the following structures: bi-, tri- and tetraantennary complex-type oligosaccharides; polylactosaminyl side chains containing Gal(beta 1----4)GlcNAc(beta 1----3) repeating units attached to the trimannose core portion of the bi-, tri- and tetraantennary complex-type oligosaccharides; unusual complex-type oligosaccharides terminated at the nonreducing end with sialic acid, alpha-galactose, beta-galactose and beta-N-acetylglucosamine; alpha-galactosyl residues linked to N-acetyllactosamine sequences; high-mannose-type oligosaccharides. These results, in conjunction with analytical data, indicate that most of the carbohydrate of this laminin is N-linked to asparagine and that there are about 43 such N-linked oligosaccharides per laminin molecule.  相似文献   

19.
D L Blithe  C A Buck  L Warren 《Biochemistry》1980,19(14):3386-3395
Glucosamine-labeled glycopeptides from control and virus-transformed BHK fibroblasts were characterized by size, lectin affinity, charge, and composition. As already demonstrated, on the basis of elution position on a column of Sephadex G-50, transformed cells contained a greater proportion of large glycopeptides than did control cells. Transformed cells also contained a larger proportion of glycopeptides which do not bind to Con A-Sepharose. By sequential chromatography on Sephadex G-50, Con A-Sepharose, and DEAE-Sephadex, approximately 40 individual peaks were partially or completely resolved. If sialic acid was removed from the glycopeptides prior to analysis by ion-exchange chromatography, 95% of the glycopeptides from control cells and 85% of the glycopeptides from transformed cells were no longer bound by DEAE-Sephadex. It was concluded that the DEAE-Sephadex elution properties of the glycopeptides are determined almost entirely by the sialic acid content of the molecules. A comparison of the profiles of control and transformed cell glycopeptides simultaneously eluting from columns of DEAE-Sephadex revealed that the differences between the two cells were largely quantitative; however, the possibility of the existence of qualitative differences as well cannot be excluded. In particular, there was one component present on the surface of transformed cells that was virtually absent in control cells. It was degraded by nitrous acid hydrolysis and heparinase and appeared to be heparan sulfate like material. After fractionation, each isolated glycopeptide population was analyzed for carbohydrate and, in some cases, amino acid content. The apparently larger glycopeptides, group A, the dominant population in transformed cells, were found to contain 3 to 4 mannose residues/glycopeptide when the sugars were normalized to sialic acid content. On the basis of the same criteria, group B glycopeptides contained 4-6 mannose residues/glycopeptide. The carbohydrate and amino acid compositions of the glycopeptides from transformed cells were, with a few exceptions, similar to those from control cells. Some isolated glycopeptides appeared to contain both O-glycosidic anad N-glycosidic linkages on the same oligopeptide.  相似文献   

20.
Carbohydrate binding specificity of a lectin, allo A, isolated from a beetle (Allomyrina dichotoma), was investigated by means of lectin affinity chromatography. Sialylated complex-type and hybrid-type oligosaccharides/glycopeptides, and sialyllactose were retained by the column, whereas desialylated ones were retarded but not retained by the column. The association constants of allo A for biantennary oligosaccharides from human serum transferrin, determined by frontal analysis, were 8.0 X 10(5) M-1, 4.5 X 10(5) M-1, and 2.5 X 10(5) M-1 for disialo-, monosialo-, and asialo-oligosaccharides, respectively. Removal of the beta-galactose residues markedly reduced the association constant to 3.5 X 10(3) M-1. Furthermore, allo A was found to have no affinity for mucin-type glycopeptides carrying the sialylated Gal beta 1----3 GalNAc sugar sequence (Ka: 3.5 X 10(3) M-1). The results of this study indicated that allo A strongly binds to the trisaccharide structure, NeuAc alpha 2-3(6)Gal-beta 1-4GlcNAc, and that its binding potency is affected by the inner core structures of oligosaccharides and glycopeptides, because the presence of a bisecting N-acetyl-glucosamine residue and an alpha-fucose residue linked to the innermost N-acetylglucosamine residue reduced the association constants for oligosaccharides and glycopeptides.  相似文献   

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