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1.
The cell surface of the parasitic protozoan Leishmania mexicana is coated by glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored glycoproteins, a GPI-anchored lipophosphoglycan and a class of free GPI glycolipids. To investigate whether the anchor or free GPIs are required for parasite growth we cloned the L.mexicana gene for dolichol-phosphate-mannose synthase (DPMS) and attempted to create DPMS knockout mutants by targeted gene deletion. DPMS catalyzes the formation of dolichol-phosphate mannose, the sugar donor for all mannose additions in the biosynthesis of both the anchor and free GPIs, except for a alpha1-3-linked mannose residue that is added exclusively to the free GPIs and lipophosphoglycan anchor precursors. The requirement for dolichol-phosphate-mannose in other glycosylation pathways in L.mexicana is minimal. Deletion of both alleles of the DPMS gene (lmdpms) consistently resulted in amplification of the lmdpms chromosomal locus unless the promastigotes were first transfected with an episomal copy of lmdpms, indicating that lmdpms, and possibly GPI biosynthesis, is essential for parasite growth. As evidence presented in this and previous studies indicates that neither GPI-anchored glycoproteins nor lipophosphoglycan are required for growth of cultured parasites, it is possible that the abundant and functionally uncharacterized free GPIs are essential membrane components.  相似文献   

2.
The compound diisopropylfluorophosphate (DFP) selectively inhibits an inositol deacylase activity in living trypanosomes that, together with the previously described phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (PMSF)-sensitive inositol acyltransferase, maintains a dynamic equilibrium between the glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchor precursor, glycolipid A [NH2(CH2)2PO4-6Man alpha 1-2Man alpha 1-6Man alpha 1-4GlcN alpha 1-6myo-inositol-1-PO4-sn-1,2-dimyristoylglycerol], and its inositol acylated form, glycolipid C. Experiments using DFP in living trypanosomes and a trypanosome cell-free system suggest that earlier GPI intermediates are also in equilibrium between their inositol acylated and nonacylated forms. However, unlike mammalian and yeast cells, bloodstream form trypanosomes do not appear to produce an inositol acylated form of glucosaminylphosphatidylinositol (GlcN-PI). A specific function of inositol acylation in trypanosomes may be to enhance the efficiency of ethanolamine phosphate addition to the Man3GlcN-(acyl)PI intermediate. Inositol deacylation appears to be a prerequisite for fatty acid remodelling of GPI intermediates that leads to the exclusive presence of myristic acid in glycolipid A and, ultimately, in the variant surface glycoprotein (VSG). In the presence of DFP, the de novo synthesis of GPI precursors cannot proceed beyond glycolipid C' (the unremodelled version of glycolipid C) and lyso-glycolipid C'. Under these conditions glycolipid C'-type GPI anchors appear on newly synthesized VSG molecules. However, the efficiencies of both anchor addition to VSG and N-glycosylation of VSG were significantly reduced. A modified model of the GPI biosynthetic pathway in bloodstream form African trypanosomes incorporating these findings is presented.  相似文献   

3.
Glycosylphosphatidylinositols (GPIs) serve as membrane anchors of polysaccharides and proteins in the protozoan parasite Leishmania major. Free GPIs that are not attached to macromolecules are present in L. major as intermediates of protein-GPI and polysaccharide-GPI synthesis or as terminal glycolipids. The importance of the intracellular location of GPIs in vivo for functions of the glycolipids is not appreciated. To examine the roles of intracellular free GPI pools for attachment to polypeptide, a GPI-specific phospholipase C (GPI-PLCp) from Trypanosoma brucei was used to probe trafficking of GPI pools inside L. major. The locations of GPIs were determined, and their catabolism by GPI-PLCp was analyzed with respect to the intracellular location of the enzyme. GPIs accumulated on the endo-lysosomal system, where GPI-PLCp was also detected. A peptide motif [CS][CS]-x(0,2)-G-x(1)-C-x(2,3)-S-x(3)-L formed part of an endosome targeting signal for GPI-PLCp. Mutations of the endosome targeting motif caused GPI-PLCp to associate with glycosomes (peroxisomes). Endosomal GPI-PLCp caused a deficiency of protein-GPI in L. major, whereas glycosomal GPI-PLCp failed to produce the GPI deficiency. We surmise that (i) endo-lysosomal GPIs are important for biogenesis of GPI-anchored proteins in L. major; (ii) sequestration of GPI-PLCp to glycosomes protects free protein-GPIs from cleavage by the phospholipase. In T. brucei, protein-GPIs are concentrated at the endoplasmic reticulum, separated from GPI-PLCp. These observations support a model in which glycosome sequestration of a catabolic GPI-PLCp preserves free protein-GPIs in vivo.  相似文献   

4.
One of the virulence factors of the protozoan parasite Leishmaniamajor is the surface glycoconjugate, lipophosphoglycan (LPG).A Ricin-resistant mutant of L.major was generated and characterisedwith respect to its virulence in mice and the structure andexpression of LPG. The LPG from this mutant (1F6-B5) retainedthe tripartite structure of wild-type LPG, comprising a glycosylphosphatidylinositol(GPI) anchor linked to a phosphorylated disaccharide backboneterminating in a nonreducing neutral oligosaccharide cap. Thestructure of the GPI anchor and the major capping oligosaccharidewere identical to wild-type LPG. However, there were variationsin the number of phosphorylated repeats (PO4-6Gal(ß1-4)Man(  相似文献   

5.
The major surface proteins of the parasitic protozoon Leishmania mexicana are anchored to the plasma membrane by glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchors. We have cloned the L. mexicana GPI8 gene that encodes the catalytic component of the GPI:protein transamidase complex that adds GPI anchors to nascent cell surface proteins in the endoplasmic reticulum. Mutants lacking GPI8 (DeltaGPI8) do not express detectable levels of GPI-anchored proteins and accumulate two putative protein-anchor precursors. However, the synthesis and cellular levels of other non-protein-linked GPIs, including lipophosphoglycan and a major class of free GPIs, are not affected in the DeltaGPI8 mutant. Significantly, the DeltaGPI8 mutant displays normal growth in liquid culture, is capable of differentiating into replicating amastigotes within macrophages in vitro, and is infective to mice. These data suggest that GPI-anchored surface proteins are not essential to L. mexicana for its entry into and survival within mammalian host cells in vitro or in vivo and provide further support for the notion that free GPIs are essential for parasite growth.  相似文献   

6.
The glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchors of Plasmodium falciparum have been proposed to be the major factors that contribute to malaria pathogenesis through their ability to induce proinflammatory responses. In this study we identified the receptors for P. falciparum GPI-induced cell signaling that leads to proinflammatory responses and studied the GPI structure-activity relationship. The data show that GPI signaling is mediated mainly through recognition by TLR2 and to a lesser extent by TLR4. The activity of sn-2-lyso-GPIs is comparable with that of the intact GPIs, whereas the activity of Man(3)-GPIs is about 80% that of the intact GPIs. The GPIs with three (intact GPIs and Man(3)-GPIs) and two fatty acids (sn-2-lyso-GPIs) appear to differ considerably in the requirement of the auxiliary receptor, TLR1 or TLR6, for recognition by TLR2. The former are preferentially recognized by TLR2/TLR1, whereas the latter are favored by TLR2/TLR6. However, the signaling pathways initiated by all three GPI types are similar, involving the MyD88-dependent activation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase, c-Jun N-terminal kinase, and p38 and NF-kappaB-signaling pathways. The signaling molecules of these pathways differentially contribute to the production of various cytokines and nitric oxide (Zhu, J., Krishnegowda, G., and Gowda, D. C. (2004) J. Biol. Chem. 280, 8617-8627). Our data also show that GPIs are degraded by the macrophage surface phospholipases predominantly into inactive species, indicating that the host can regulate GPI activity at least in part by this mechanism. These results imply that macrophage surface phospholipases play important roles in the GPI-induced innate immune responses and malaria pathogenesis.  相似文献   

7.
The first step in glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) membrane anchor biosynthesis that is defective in paroxysmal nocturnal haemoglobinuria is mediated by an N-acetylglucosaminyl transferase expressed in the endoplasmic reticulum. Six human genes encode subunits of this enzyme, namely PIG-A, PIG-C, PIG-H, PIG-P, GPI1, and DPM2. Here, the human GPI1 gene is characterised. This gene is organised into eleven exons. The locus was mapped to chromosome 16p13.3 near the haemoglobin alpha chain locus. GPI1 is expressed ubiquitously in human cells and tissues. Expression levels are markedly elevated in haematopoietic tissues (bone marrow, foetal liver). To determine whether human GPI1 is essential for human GPI biosynthesis, antisense RNA was expressed in HEK293 cells. Transfectants exhibited a marked but incomplete decrease in the expression of a GPI-linked reporter protein, confirming that GPI1 is required for efficient GPI biosynthesis. In contrast, expression of GPI-linked proteins is normal in lymphatic cell lines from individuals with the alpha thalassaemia/mental retardation syndrome, which is characterised by large deletions from chromosome 16p removing one of the two GPI1 alleles along with the haemoglobin alpha locus. In conclusion, GPI1 plays an important role in the biosynthesis of GPI intermediates. Due to its autosomal localisation, the heterozygous deletion of GPI1 does not lead to an overt defect in the expression of GPI-linked proteins.  相似文献   

8.
Aqueous phenol extraction of the lower trypanosomatid Leptomonas samueli released into the aqueous layer a chloroform/methanol/water-soluble glycophosphosphingolipid fraction. Alkaline degradation and purification by gel filtration chromatography resulted in a tetrasaccharide (phosphatidylinositol (PI)-oligosaccharide A), and a pentasaccharide (PI-oligosaccharide B), each containing 2 mol of 2-aminoethylphosphonate and 1 mol of phosphate. Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and fast atom bombardment-mass spectrometry suggested that the structure of PI-oligosaccharide A is [formula: see text] and that of PI-oligosaccharide B is as shown. [formula: see text] Both compounds contain an inositol unit linked to ceramide via a phosphodiester bridge. The major aliphatic components of the ceramide portion are stearic acid, lignoceric acid, and C20-phytosphingosine. These novel glycolipids fall within the glycosylated phosphatidylinositol (GPI) family, since they contain the core structure Man alpha (1-->4)GlcNH2 alpha (1-->6)myo-inositol-1-PO4, which is also found in the glycoinositolphospholipids and lipophosphoglycan of Leishmania spp., the L. major promastigote surface protease, the glycosylphosphatidylinositol anchor of Trypanosoma brucei variant surface glycoprotein, and the lipopeptidophosphoglycan of Trypanosoma cruzi. The glycophosphosphingolipids of Leptomonas have features in common with the glycolipids of both Leishmania and T. cruzi, resembling the former by the alpha (1-->3) linkage of mannose to the GPI core, while the 2-aminoethylphosphonate substituent on O-6 of glucosamine and the presence of ceramide in place of glycerol lipids is more reminiscent of T. cruzi. Thus these data lend some support to the hypothesis that both T. cruzi and Leishmania evolved from a Leptomonas-like ancestor.  相似文献   

9.
Cells synthesize the GPI anchor carbohydrate core by successively adding N-acetylglucosamine, three mannoses, and phosphoethanolamine (EtN-P) onto phosphatidylinositol, thus forming the complete GPI precursor lipid which is then added to proteins. Previously, we isolated a GPI deficient yeast mutant accumulating a GPI intermediate containing only two mannoses, suggesting that it has difficulty in adding the third, alpha1,2-linked Man of GPI anchors. The mutant thus displays a similar phenotype as the mammalian mutant cell line S1A-b having a mutation in the PIG-B gene. The yeast mutant, herein named gpi10-1 , contains a mutation in YGL142C, a yeast homolog of the human PIG-B. YGL142C predicts a highly hydrophobic integral membrane protein which by sequence is related to ALG9, a yeast gene required for adding Man in alpha1,2 linkage to N-glycans. Whereas gpi10-1 cells grow at a normal rate and make normal amounts of GPI proteins, the microsomes of gpi10-1 are completely unable to add the third Man in an in vitro assay. Further analysis of the GPI intermediate accumulating in gpi10 shows it to have the structure Manalpha1-6(EtN-P-)Manalpha1-4GlcNalpha1- 6(acyl) Inositol-P-lipid. The presence of EtN-P on the alpha1,4-linked Man of GPI anchors is typical of mammalian and a few other organisms but had not been observed in yeast GPI proteins. This additional EtN-P is not only found in the abnormal GPI intermediate of gpi10-1 but is equally present on the complete GPI precursor lipid of wild type cells. Thus, GPI biosynthesis in yeast and mammals proceeds similarly and differs from the pathway described for Trypanosoma brucei in several aspects.   相似文献   

10.
The major zinc metalloprotease of Leishmania (gp63), an important determinant of parasite virulence, is attached to the parasite surface via a glycosylphosphatidylinositol anchor. Here we report the spontaneous release of proteolytically active gp63 from a number of Leishmania isolates, causing cutaneous and visceral disease. To investigate the mechanism(s) of gp63 release, we transfected a gp63-deficient variant of Leishmania amazonensis with constructs expressing gp63 and various mutants thereof. Surprisingly, approximately half of wild type gp63 was found in the culture supernatant 12 h post-synthesis. Biochemical analysis of the extracellular gp63 revealed two forms of the protein, one that is released from the cell surface, and another, that apparently is directly secreted. Release of cell surface gp63 was significantly reduced when the proteolytic activity of the protein was inactivated by site-specific mutagenesis or inhibited by zinc chelation, suggesting that release involves autoproteolysis. The extracellular gp63 does not contain a glycosylphosphatidylinositol moiety or ethanolamine, indicating that phospholipolysis is not involved in the release process. Release of gp63 is also independent of glycosylation. The finding of proteolytically active, extracellular gp63 produced by multiple Leishmania isolates suggests a potential role of the extracellular enzyme in substrate degradation relevant to their survival in both the mammalian host and the insect vector.  相似文献   

11.
A wide variety of eukaryotic membrane proteins are anchored to the outside of cells by covalent linkage to glycosyl phosphatidylinositol (GPI). One of the best characterized examples is the variant surface glycoprotein (VSG) of the protozoan parasite, Trypanosoma brucei. The structure of the GPI precursor is ethanolamine-PO4-Man alpha 1-2Man alpha 1-6Man alpha 1-4GlcNH2-PI; the phosphoethanolamine moiety forms an amide linkage to the VSG polypeptide alpha-COOH group during its attachment to protein. Here we report that the serine esterase inhibitor, phenylmethanesulphonyl fluoride (PMSF), inhibits phosphoethanolamine incorporation into the GPI precursor resulting in the accumulation of a Man3GlcNH2-PI intermediate. PMSF exerts this effect both in living trypanosomes and in a trypanosome-derived cell-free system. This is the first report of an inhibitor which affects GPI biosynthesis but not N-glycosylation. A model of the mechanism of phosphoethanolamine incorporation into the GPI precursor, based on the known properties of PMSF, is presented.  相似文献   

12.
A glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) glycolipid antigen recognized by sera from patients with visceral leishmaniasis was isolated from Leishmania donovani promastigotes. The carbohydrate moiety was cleaved from the lipid part by digestion with specific phosphatidylinositol phospholipase C. After separation, structural analysis was carried out on the phosphorylated inositol oligosaccharide and the alkylacyl glycerol. The following major structures were found: [formula: see text] The presence of the conserved sequence Man alpha 1-2Man alpha 1-6Man alpha 1-4GlcN-PI of glycosyl phosphatidylinositol protein anchors in this antigen may be consistent with a precursor role of Leishmania glycosyl phosphatidylinositol anchored proteins for this glycolipid.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
Ohishi K  Inoue N  Kinoshita T 《The EMBO journal》2001,20(15):4088-4098
Many eukaryotic cell surface proteins are anchored to the plasma membrane via glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI). The GPI transamidase mediates GPI anchoring in the endoplasmic reticulum, by replacing a protein's C-terminal GPI attachment signal peptide with a pre-assembled GPI. During this transamidation reaction, the GPI transamidase forms a carbonyl intermediate with a substrate protein. It was known that the GPI transamidase is a complex containing GAA1 and GPI8. Here, we report two new components of this enzyme: PIG-S and PIG-T. To determine roles for PIG-S and PIG-T, we disrupted these genes in mouse F9 cells by homologous recombination. PIG-S and PIG-T knockout cells were defective in transfer of GPI to proteins, particularly in formation of the carbonyl intermediates. We also demonstrate that PIG-S and PIG-T form a protein complex with GAA1 and GPI8, and that PIG-T maintains the complex by stabilizing the expression of GAA1 and GPI8. Saccharomyces cerevisiae Gpi16p (YHR188C) and Gpi17p (YDR434W) are orthologues of PIG-T and PIG-S, respectively.  相似文献   

15.
The major surface antigen of the mammalian bloodstream form of Trypanosoma brucei, the variant surface glycoprotein (VSG), is attached to the cell membrane by a glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchor. The VSG anchor is susceptible to phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C (PI-PLC). Candidate precursor glycolipids, P2 and P3, which are PI-PLC-sensitive and -resistant respectively, have been characterized in the bloodstream stage. In the insect midgut stage, the major surface glycoprotein, procyclic acidic repetitive glycoprotein, is also GPI-anchored but is resistant to PI-PLC. To determine how the structure of the GPI anchor is altered at different life stages, we characterized candidate GPI molecules in procyclic T. brucei. The structure of a major procyclic GPI, PP1, is ethanolamine-PO4-Man alpha 1-2Man alpha 1-6 Man alpha 1-GlcN-acylinositol, linked to lysophosphatidic acid. The inositol can be labeled with [3H]palmitic acid, and the glyceride with [3H]stearic acid. We have also found that all detectable ethanolamine-containing GPIs from procyclic cells contain acylinositol and are resistant to cleavage by PI-PLC. This suggests that the procyclic acidic repetitive glycoprotein GPI anchor structure differs from that of the VSG by virtue of the structures of the GPIs available for transfer.  相似文献   

16.
Leishmania parasites synthesize an abundance of mannose (Man)-containing glycoconjugates thought to be essential for virulence to the mammalian host and for viability. These glycoconjugates include lipophosphoglycan (LPG), proteophosphoglycans (PPGs), glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored proteins, glycoinositolphospholipids (GIPLs), and N-glycans. A prerequisite for their biosynthesis is an ample supply of the Man donors GDP-Man and dolicholphosphate-Man. We have cloned from Leishmania mexicana the gene encoding the enzyme phosphomannomutase (PMM) and the previously described dolicholphosphate-Man synthase gene (DPMS) that are involved in Man activation. Surprisingly, gene deletion experiments resulted in viable parasite lines lacking the respective open reading frames (ΔPMM and ΔDPMS), a result against expectation and in contrast to the lethal phenotype observed in gene deletion experiments with fungi. L. mexicana ΔDPMS exhibits a selective defect in LPG, protein GPI anchor, and GIPL biosynthesis, but despite the absence of these structures, which have been implicated in parasite virulence and viability, the mutant remains infectious to macrophages and mice. By contrast, L. mexicana ΔPMM are largely devoid of all known Man-containing glycoconjugates and are unable to establish an infection in mouse macrophages or the living animal. Our results define Man activation leading to GDP-Man as a virulence pathway in Leishmania.  相似文献   

17.
The 1G7-antigen is expressed by the infective metacyclic trypomastigote stage of the protozoan parasite Trypanosoma cruzi. The 1G7-antigen is a 90-kDa glycoprotein, present at about 40,000 copies/cell, which is anchored in the plasma membrane via a glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) membrane anchor. The glycan of the GPI anchor has been isolated from immunopurified 1G7-antigen and its structure determined using a combination of methylation linkage analysis and exoglycosidase sequencing. The structure of the glycan is Man alpha 1-2Man alpha 1-2Man alpha 1-6Man alpha 1-4GlcNH2. The glucosamine residue is in glycosidic linkage to a phosphatidylinositol moiety. The penultimate nonreducing alpha-Man residue is substituted with phosphate, which is most likely part of an ethanolamine phosphate bridge linking the GPI anchor to the 1G7-antigen polypeptide. The glycan sequence was obtained from 1.1 nmol of glycoprotein isolated from a detergent lysate of whole cells. The procedures reported here represent a high sensitivity protocol for determining GPI glycan structures from small quantities of biological material. The structure of the 1G7-antigen GPI anchor is consistent with the conserved core structure of all GPI anchors analyzed to date and is similar to that of the T. cruzi lipopeptidophosphoglycan. The biosynthesis of GPI anchors and lipopeptidophosphoglycan in T. cruzi is discussed in the light of this structural homology.  相似文献   

18.
Glycoconjugates are utilized by eukaryotic organisms ranging from yeast to humans for the cell surface expression of a wide variety of proteins and lipids. These glycoconjugates are expressed as enzymes or receptors and serve a diversity of functions, including cell signaling and cell survival. In parasitic protozoans, glycoconjugates play roles in infectivity, survival, virulence and immune evasion. Among the alternate glycoconjugate structures that have been identified, glycosylphosphatidylinositols (GPIs) represent a universal structure for the anchorage of proteins, lipids, and phosphosaccharides to cellular membranes. Biosynthesis of the GPI is a multi-step process that culminates in the attachment of the assembled GPI to a precursor protein. This final step in the transfer of the GPI to a protein is catalyzed by GPI8 of the putative transamidase complex (TAM). GPI8 functions dually to perform the proteolytic cleavage of the C-terminal signal sequence of the precursor protein, followed by the formation of an amide bond between the protein and the ethanolamine phosphate of the GPI. This review summarizes the current aggregate of biochemical, gene-disruption and active site mutagenesis studies, which provide evidence that GPI8 is responsible for the protein-GPI anchoring reaction. We describe recently published studies that have identified other potential components of the TAM complex and that have elucidated their likely role in protein-GPI attachment. Further, we discuss the biochemical, molecular and functional differences between protozoan and mammalian GPI8 and the protein-GPI anchoring machinery. Finally, we will present the implications of these studies for the development of anti-parasite drug therapies.  相似文献   

19.
Many eukaryotic surface glycoproteins, including the variant surface glycoproteins (VSGs) of Trypanosoma brucei, are synthesized with a carboxyl-terminal hydrophobic peptide extension that is cleaved and replaced by a complex glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) membrane anchor within 1-5 min of the completion of polypeptide synthesis. We have reported the purification and partial characterization of candidate precursor glycolipids (P2 and P3) from T. brucei. P2 and P3 contain ethanolamine-phosphate-Man alpha 1-2Man alpha 1-6Man alpha 1-GlcN linked glycosidically to an inositol residue, as do all the GPI anchors that have been structurally characterized. The anchors on mature VSGs contain a heterogenously branched galactose structure attached alpha 1-3 to the mannose residue adjacent to the glucosamine. We report the identification of free GPIs that appear to be similarly galactosylated. These glycolipids contain diacylglycerol and alpha-galactosidase-sensitive glycan structures which are indistinguishable from the glycans derived from galactosylated VSG GPI anchors. We discuss the relevance of these galactosylated GPIs to the biosynthesis of VSG GPI anchors.  相似文献   

20.
Yeast mcd4-174 mutants are blocked in glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchoring of protein, but the stage at which GPI biosynthesis is interrupted in vivo has not been identified, and Mcd4p has also been implicated in phosphatidylserine and ATP transport. We report that the major GPI that accumulates in mcd4-174 in vivo is Man(2)-GlcN-(acyl-Ins)PI, consistent with proposals that Mcd4p adds phosphoethanolamine to the first mannose of yeast GPI precursors. Mcd4p-dependent modification of GPIs can partially be bypassed in the mcd4-174/gpi11 double mutant and in mcd4Delta; mutants by high-level expression of PIG-B and GPI10, which respectively encode the human and yeast mannosyltransferases that add the third mannose of the GPI precursor. Rescue of mcd4Delta; by GPI10 indicates that Mcd4p-dependent addition of EthN-P to the first mannose of GPIs is not obligatory for transfer of the third mannose by Gpi10p.  相似文献   

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