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1.
When pig liver microsomal preparations were incubated with GDP-[14C]mannose, 10–40% of the 14C was transferred to mannolipid and 1–3% to mannoprotein. The transfer to mannolipid was readily reversible and GDP was one of the products of the reaction. It was possible to reverse the reaction by adding excess of GDP and to show the incorporation of [14C]GDP into GDP-mannose. When excess of unlabelled GDP-mannose was added to a partially completed incubation there was a rapid transfer back of [14C]mannose from the mannolipid to GDP-mannose. The other product of the reaction, the mannolipid, had the properties of a prenol phosphate mannose. This was illustrated by its lability to dilute acid but stability to dilute alkali, and by its chromatographic properties. Dolichol phosphate stimulated the incorporation of [14C]mannose into both mannolipid and into protein, although the former effect was larger and more consistent than the latter. The incorporation of exogenous [3H]dolichol phosphate into the mannolipid, and its release, accompanied by mannose, on treatment of the mannolipid with dilute acid, confirmed that exogenous dolichol phosphate can act as an acceptor of mannose in this system. It was shown that other exogenous polyprenol phosphates (but not farnesol phosphate or cetyl phosphate) can substitute for dolichol phosphate in this respect but that they are much less efficient than dolichol phosphate in stimulating the transfer of mannose to protein. Since pig liver contained substances with the chromatographic properties of both dolichol phosphate and dolichol phosphate mannose, which caused an increase in transfer of [14C]mannose from GDP-[14C]mannose to mannolipid, it was concluded that endogenous dolichol phosphate acts as an acceptor of mannose in the microsomal preparation. The results indicate that the mannolipid is an intermediate in the transfer of mannose from GDP-mannose to protein. Some 4% of the mannose of a sample of mannolipid added to an incubation was transferred to protein. A scheme is proposed to explain the variations with time in the production of radioactive mannolipid, mannoprotein, mannose 1-phosphate and mannose from GDP-[14C]mannose that takes account of the above observations. ATP, ADP, UTP, GDP, ADP-glucose and UDP-glucose markedly inhibited the transfer of mannose to the mannolipid.  相似文献   

2.
A particulate enzyme fraction isolated from yeast (Hansenula holstii) catalyzes the transfer of mannose from GDPmannose to endogenous lipid acceptors. Kinetic studies are presented which suggest that one of the mannolipids is a precursor to cell wall mannan. The solubility and chromatographic properties, the stability to mild alkali, and the release of mannose by mild acid hydrolysis are characteristic of polyisoprenyl phosphoryl mannose. Addition of dolichol phosphate to the enzyme system stimulates the synthesis of a mannolipid with properties similar to that synthesized from endogenous lipid. That the exogenous dolichol phosphate was acting as a mannosyl acceptor was demonstrated by showing that dolichol [32P]phosphate was converted to dolichol [32P]phosphate mannose.  相似文献   

3.
The mannolipid synthesized from GDP-mannose and lipid acceptors in a particulate enzyme preparation from the yeast Hansenula holstii (R. K. Bretthauer, S. Wu, and W. E. Irwin, (1973) Biochim. Biophys. Acta, 304, 736–747) has the properties of dolicholmonophosphate mannose. Transfer of [14C]mannose from exogenously supplied, purified mannolipid to endogenous protein acceptors of the particulate enzyme fraction has now been demonstrated. The synthesis of radioactive products which are insoluble in chloroform-methanol and water is dependent upon time and concentrations of substrate, particulate fraction protein, and detergent. Addition of MgCl2 or MnCl2 to incubation mixtures prepared in the absence of these ions had only small stimulatory effects (20–25%), suggesting that the reaction is not dependent upon metal ions. Relatively high concentrations (0.005 m-0.05 m) of EDTA did partially inhibit the reaction, but this is considered to be due to secondary effects.Seventy percent of the radioactivity in the chloroform-methanol insoluble residue was solubilized with hot, neutral citrate buffer. The Chromatographic properties of this material on Sephadex gels and on DEAE-Sephadex were very similar to the properties of glycoprotein products derived from GDP-[14C]mannose. The chloroform-methanol insoluble products were also solubilized with Pronase which subsequently resulted in the isolation of a radioactive glycopeptide that contained 25% of the radioactivity transferred from mannolipid. The radioactive component of this glycopeptide was shown by β-elmination experiments and by amino acid analyses to be [14C]mannose residues linked O-glycosidically to serine and threonine residues. It was concluded, therefore, that one function of the mannolipid is to serve as mannosyl donor in the synthesis of the mannosyl-O-serine (threonine) linkage region of glycoproteins which may be part of the cell wall mannan-protein complex. Other mannose-containing products may also be synthesized from the mannolipid, as β-elimination of the chloroform-methanol insoluble fraction or of the Pronase soluble fraction did not result in recovery of all of the radioactivity as [14C]mannose.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
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   

6.
The results of molecular weight studies, structural analysis of the [(14)C]polysaccharides, and enzymic properties indicate that the Pisum sativum guanosine diphosphosphate glucose: glucosyltransferase is an enzymic component involved in the biosynthesis of glucomannan chains. The properties of the Pisum sativum particulate enzyme are essentially identical to the glucomannan synthetase obtained from Phaseolus aureus. Also present in the particulate preparation is an enzyme which catalyzes the formation of a [(14)C]mannolipid, using guanosine diphosphate-[(14)C]mannose as a substrate. The [(14)C]mannolipid is hydrolyzed by treatment with 0.012 m HCl, but is stable to treatment with 0.09 m NaOH. The formation of the [(14)C]mannolipid is apparently reversed by guanosine diphosphate, but not by guanosine monophosphate. The chromatographic mobility of the [(14)C]mannolipid is identical to that of a similar mannolipid synthesized by a Phaseolus aureus enzyme.  相似文献   

7.
Hamster liver post-nuclear membranes catalyze the transfer of mannose from GDP-mannose to endogenous dolichyl phosphate and to a second major endogenous acidic lipid. This mannolipid was believed to be synthesized from endogenous retinyl phosphate and was tentatively identified as retinyl phosphate mannose (Ret-P-Man) (De Luca, L. M., Brugh, M. R. Silverman-Jones, C. S. and Shidoji, Y. (1982) Biochem. J. 208, 159-170). To characterize this endogenous mannolipid in more detail, we isolated and purified the mannolipid from incubations containing hamster liver membranes and GDP-[14C]mannose and compared its properties to those of authentic Ret-P-Man. We found that the endogenous mannolipid was separable from authentic Ret-P-Man on a Mono Q anion exchange column, did not exhibit the absorbance spectrum characteristic of a retinol moiety, and was stable to mild acid under conditions which cleave authentic Ret-P-Man. The endogenous mannolipid was sensitive to mild base hydrolysis and mannose was released from the mannolipid by snake venom phosphodiesterase digestion. These properties were consistent with the endogenous acceptor being phosphatidic acid. Addition of exogenous phosphatidic acid, but not phospholipids with a head group blocking the phosphate moiety, to incubations containing hamster liver membranes and GDP-[14C]mannose resulted in the synthesis of a mannolipid with chromatographic and physical properties identical to the endogenous mannolipid. A double-labeled mannolipid was synthesized in incubations containing hamster liver membranes, GDP-[14C]mannose, and [3H]phosphatidic acid. Mannosyl transfer to exogenous phosphatidic acid was saturable with increasing concentrations of phosphatidic acid and GDP-mannose and specific for glycosyl transfer from GDP-mannose. Class E Thy-1-negative mutant mouse lymphoma cell membranes, which are defective in dolichyl phosphate mannose synthesis, also fail to transfer mannose from GDP-mannose to exogenous phosphatidic acid or retinyl phosphate. Amphomycin, an inhibitor of dolichyl phosphate mannose synthesis, blocked mannosyl transfer to the endogenous lipid, and to exogenous retinyl phosphate and phosphatidic acid. We conclude that the same mannosyltransferase responsible for dolichyl phosphate mannose synthesis can also utilize in vitro exogenous retinyl phosphate and phosphatidic acid as well as endogenous phosphatidic acid as mannosyl acceptors.  相似文献   

8.
In the absence of detergent, the transfer of mannose from GDP-mannose to rat liver microsomal vesicles was highly stimulated by exogenous retinyl phosphate in incubations containing bovine serum albumin, as measured in a filter binding assay. Under these conditions 65% of mannose 6-phosphatase activity was latent. The transfer process was linear with time up to 5min and with protein concentration up to 1.5mg/0.2ml. It was also temperature-dependent. The microsomal uptake of mannose was highly dependent on retinyl phosphate and was saturable against increasing amounts of retinyl phosphate, a concentration of 15mum giving half-maximal transfer. The uptake system was also saturated by increasing concentrations of GDP-mannose, with an apparent K(m) of 18mum. Neither exogenous dolichyl phosphate nor non-phosphorylated retinoids were active in this process in the absence of detergent. Phosphatidylethanolamine and synthetic dipalmitoylglycerophosphocholine were also without activity. Several water-soluble organic phosphates (1.5mm), such as phenyl phosphate, 4-nitrophenyl phosphate, phosphoserine and phosphocholine, did not inhibit the retinyl phosphate-stimulated mannosyl transfer to microsomes. This mannosyl-transfer activity was highest in microsomes and marginal in mitochondria, plasma and nuclear membranes. It was specific for mannose residues from GDP-mannose and did not occur with UDP-[(3)H]galactose, UDP- or GDP-[(14)C]glucose, UDP-N-acetyl[(14)C]-glucosamine and UDP-N-acetyl[(14)C]galactosamine, all at 24mum. The mannosyl transfer was inhibited 85% by 3mm-EDTA and 93% by 0.8mm-amphomycin. At 2min, 90% of the radioactivity retained on the filter could be extracted with chloroform/methanol (2:1, v/v) and mainly co-migrated with retinyl phosphate mannose by t.l.c. This mannolipid was shown to bind to immunoglobulin G fraction of anti-(vitamin A) serum and was displaced by a large excess of retinoic acid, thus confirming the presence of the beta-ionone ring in the mannolipid. The amount of retinyl phosphate mannose formed in the bovine serum albumin/retinyl phosphate incubation is about 100-fold greater than in incubations containing 0.5% Triton X-100. In contrast with the lack of activity as a mannosyl acceptor for exogenous dolichyl phosphate in the present assay system, endogenous dolichyl phosphate clearly functions as an acceptor. Moreover in the same incubations a mannolipid with chromatographic properties of retinyl phosphate mannose was also synthesized from endogenous lipid acceptor. The biosynthesis of this mannolipid (retinyl phosphate mannose) was optimal at MnCl(2) concentrations between 5 and 10mm and could not be detected below 0.6mm-MnCl(2), when synthesis of dolichyl phosphate mannose from endogenous dolichyl phosphate was about 80% of optimal synthesis. Under optimal conditions (5mm-MnCl(2)) endogenous retinyl phosphate mannose represented about 20% of dolichyl phosphate mannose at 15min of incubation at 37 degrees C.  相似文献   

9.
Endogenous dolichol was shown to function as a natural acceptor of mannose residues by using regenerating rat liver containing [(3)H]dolichol. When subcellular fractions from this liver were incubated with GDP-[(14)C]mannose a double-labelled lipid, which represented 30% of the total [(14)C]mannolipid, could be isolated. This lipid was shown to be identical with the dolichol phosphate mannose formed from exogenous dolichol phosphate, by chromatography, stability to alkali and by chemical cleavage to mannose and dolichol derivatives. It was formed by the rough endoplasmic reticulum and mitochondria. If it is concerned in glycoprotein synthesis this would suggest that it functions in the formation of both secreted and mitochondrial glycoproteins. When both the dolichol and retinol of rat tissue were radioactive they made similar contributions to the synthesis of the lipid by liver microsomal fractions and intestinal epithelial cells.  相似文献   

10.
When a membrane preparation from the lactating bovine mammary gland is incubated with GDP-[14C] mannose, mannose is incorporated into a [14C] mannolipid, a [Man-14C] oligosaccharide-lipid, and metabolically stable endogenous acceptor(s). The rate of mannosyl incorporation is the fastest into [14C] mannolipid, intermediate in [Man-14C] oligosaccharide-lipid, and least into [Man-14C] endogenous acceptor(s). The [14C] mannolipid has been partially purified and characterized. Mild acid hydrolysis of this compound gives [14C] mannose, whereas alkaline hydrolysis yielded [14C] mannose phosphate as the labeled product. The t½ of hydrolysis of the mannolipid under the acidic and basic conditions are comparable to values obtained for mannosyl phosphoryl dolichol in other systems. The mannolipid is chromatographically indistinguishable from calf brain mannosyl phosphoryl polyisoprenol and chemically synthesized β-mannosyl phosphoryl dolichol. Exogenous dolichol phosphate stimulates the synthesis of mannolipid in mammary particulate preparations 8.5-fold. Synthesis of mannolipid is freely reversible; in the presence of GDP, the transfer of mannosyl moiety from endogenously labeled mannolipid to GDP-mannose is obtained. All of these results indicate that the structure of mannolipid is mannosyl phosphoryl polyisoprenol. Even though the precise chain length of the polyisoprenol portion has not been established, it is tentatively suggested to be dolichol. Partially purified [14C] mannolipid can directly serve as a mannosyl donor in the synthesis of [Man-14C] oligosaccharide-lipid and [Man-14C] endogenous acceptor(s). Pulse and chase kinetics utilizing GDP-mannose to chase the mannosyl transfer from GDP-[14C] mannose in the mammary membrane incubations caused an immediate and rapid turnover of [14C] mannose from [14C] mannolipid while the incorporation of label in [Man-14C] oligosaccharide-lipid and radioactive endogenous acceptor(s) continued for a short period before coming to a halt. Both gel filtration and electrophoresis indicate that the endogenous acceptor(s) are a mixture of 2 or more glycoproteins since incubation with proteases releases all of the radioactivity into water soluble low-molecular-weight components, perhaps glycopeptides. All of the above evidence is consistent with the following precursor-product relationship: GDP-mannose ? mannosyl phosphoryl polyisoprenol → mannosyl-oligosaccharide-lipid → mannosyl-proteins. The exact structure of the oligosaccharide-lipid and the endogenous glycoproteins is unknown.  相似文献   

11.
The radioactive products derived from transfer of [14C]mannose residues from GDP-[14C]mannose to endogenous acceptors of a Hansenula holstii particulate enzyme preparation have been solubilized by Pronase digestion. From this soluble mixture, glycopeptides containing [14C]mannose have been purified and have been shown by β-elimination-reduction experiments to contain radioactive mannose and oligosaccharides of mannose linked to serine and threonine residues. Radioactive macromolecular complexes of mannan-protein were extracted from the particulate enzyme fraction with hot, neutral citrate buffer. These components contained variable quantities of protein, mannose, and phosphate. The more neutral components were reduced in size by Pronase digestion and yielded glycopeptides similar to those obtained by direct Pronase digestion of the particulate fraction.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
The distribution of membrane-bound enzymes involved in mannan biosynthesis in plasma and mesosomal membranes of Micrococcus lysodeikticus has been investigated. Isolated mesosomal vesicles, unlike plasma membrane preparations, cannot catalyze the transfer of [14C]mannose from GDP-[14C]mannose into mannan. This appears to result from the inability of this membrane system to synthesize the carrier lipid [14C]mannosyl-1-phosphorylundecaprenol. In contrast, this is the major mannolipid synthesized from GDP-[14C]mannose by isolated plasma membranes. The possibility that substrate inaccessibility could account for the failure to detect the enzyme in isolated mesosomal vesicles appears unlikely from the lack of activity following disruption of the vesicles with ultrasound or with surface active agents. Both membrane preparations possessed the ability to catalyse the transfer of [14C]mannose from purified [14C]mannosyl-1-phosphorylundecaprenol into mannan. Furthermore, free mannan and mannan located on both unlabeled mesosomal and unlabeled plasma membranes could act as acceptors of [14C]mannosyl units from 14C-labeled carrier lipid located in prelabeled plasma membranes. The possibility that the juxtaposition of mesosomal vesicles and enveloping plasma membrane (i.e. the mesosomal sacculus) in vivo allows mannan, located on mesosomal vesicles, to accept mannosyl units from carrier lipid located in the sacculus membrane is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Abstract— Mannose was transferred from GDP-[14C]mannose by homogenates of embryonic chick and adult rat brain to mannolipids with properties identical to manriosyl-phosphoryl-dihydropolyisoprenols. Embryonic chick brain formed six-fold larger quantities of mannolipid than adult rat brain. The reaction was stimulated by Mn2+ ions and Triton X-100 but inhibited by EDTA. Phosphoenolpyruvic acid had no effect on the reaction. A crude mitochondrial fraction was two to three times more active than the microsomal fraction. All radioactivity in the mannolipid could be displaced by the addition of non-radioactive GDP-mannose. The endogenous lipid acceptor in brain was readily labelled in vivo by injection of [3H]mevalonate into the amniotic sac of 7-day-old embryos. The mannolipid formed had the properties of an acidic phospholipid on column and TLC, was stable to dilute alkali but readily cleaved by dilute acid. Synthesis was markedly stimulated by the addition of pig liver or calf brain dolichol phosphate in the presence of Triton X-100 and Mn2+. The mannolipid so formed displayed chemical characteristics identical to the endogenous lipid acceptor. Incubation of the purified radioactive mannolipid with the 'post-nuclear' fraction from 14-day-old embryonic chick brain in the presence of EDTA and Triton X-100 resulted in the transfer of 40-50 per cent of the radioactive mannose to protein and 40-45 per cent to water soluble compounds. The efficiency of transfer of radioactivity from endogenously formed mannolipid with or without the addition of dolichol phosphate was similar to exogenously added highly purified mannolipid. These results are compatible with the hypothesis that synthesis of the mannose core of brain glycoproteins involves the synthesis first of mannosyl-phosphoryl-dolichols followed by transfer of the mannose to glycoprotein.  相似文献   

15.
1. Monoethyl phosphate was isolated from the liver of rats treated with large doses of ethanol. The (14)C- and (32)P-labelled products were obtained when [2-(14)C]ethanol and [(32)P]orthophosphate respectively were used as the radioactive precursors. 2. The isolated ethyl phosphate preparations were identified by their chemical properties, chromatographic behaviour and enzymic hydrolysis, which, for the (14)C-labelled substrate, resulted in a partial recovery of the administered [(14)C]ethanol. 3. The possibility of artifact formation of ethyl phosphate was excluded by suitable control experiments. 4. It is concluded that ethyl phosphate formed in vivo may be a product of phosphate-catalysed alcoholysis of various phosphate esters. The physiological significance of the possible substitution of water by ethanol in reactions catalysed by hydrolytic enzymes under conditions of acute body intoxication with the alcohol is emphasized.  相似文献   

16.
Exposure of authentic dolichyl α-D-[14C]mannopyranosyl phosphate (I) or calf pancreas dolichyl [14C]mannopyranosyl phosphate (II) to ozone at ?70° in pentane followed by treatment with triphenylphosphine gave water-soluble fragments in 65–95% yield. The radioactive products obtained were similar; the major fragment had a mobility on tlc greater than that of mannose but lower than that of citronellyl β-D-mannopyranosyl phosphate. The electrophoretic behavior of the fragments indicated that they possessed intact phosphodiester linkages. α-Mannosidase released [14C]mannose from the fragments of I but not from the fragments of II; however, the latter were susceptible to β-mannosidase indicating that the pancreatic mannolipid contains a β-linked mannosyl residue.  相似文献   

17.
The initial rate of dolichyl phosphate mannose biosynthesis was measured in white-matter membranes from pig brain at various ages from before birth throughout the period of most rapid brain development. Dolichyl phosphate mannose synthase activity increased from prenatal values to a maximum in 3 week-old animals, and gradually decreased to adult values after 8 weeks of age. The nature of the developmental change was investigated by enzymic and biochemical comparisons of the membrane preparations from the most active age (3 weeks) and adult controls. The specific activity of dolichyl phosphate mannose synthase in preparations from actively myelinating animals was approx. 3-fold higher than adults when mannolipid formation was assayed with saturating concentrations of GDP-[14C]mannose and utilizing only endogenous acceptor lipid. No major variations were found in the apparent Km values for GDP-mannose or exogenous dolichyl monophosphate. However, the ratio of dolichyl phosphate mannose synthase activity for myelinating animals/adult animals decreased significantly when large amounts of exogenous dolichyl monophosphate were added to the incubation mixtures. Dolichyl phosphate mannose synthase activity was also compared in white-matter membranes depleted of endogenous dolichyl monophosphate by enzymic mannosylation or treatment with butanol. When these preparations were assayed with identical amounts of exogenous dolichyl monophosphate, the dolichyl monophosphate-depleted membranes from actively myelinating animals contained only 20–30% more dolichyl phosphate mannose synthase activity. Overall, these studies strongly suggest that the developmental change in dolichyl phosphate mannose synthase activity is due primarily to the presence of a relatively lower amount of endogenous dolichyl monophosphate being accessible to the mannosyltransferase in the white-matter membranes from adult animals.  相似文献   

18.
1. The transfer of mannose from GDP-(U-14-C)mannose into endogenous acceptors of bovine adrenal medullla and rat parotid was studied. The rapidly labelled product, a glycolipid, was partially purified and characterized. 2. It was stable to mild alkaline hydrolysis but yielded (14-C)mannose on mild acid hydrolysis. It co-chromatographed with mannosyl phosphoryl dolichol in four t.l.c. systems and on DEAE-cellulose acetate. Addition of dolichol phosphate or a dolichol phosphate-enriched fraction prepared from pig liver stimulated mannolipid synthesis. 3. The formation of mammolipid appeared reversible, since addition of GDP to a system synthesizing the mannolipid caused a rapid loss of label from the mannolipid. UDP-N-acetylglucosamine did not inhibit mannolipid synthesis except at high concentrations (2 mM), even though in the absence of GDP-mannose, N-acetylglucosamine was incorporated into a lipid having the properties of a glycosylated polyprenyl phosphate. 4. Mannose from GDP-mannose was also incorporated into two other acceptors, (2y being insoluble in chloroform-methanol (2:1, v/v) but soluble in choloroform-methanol-water (10:10:3, by vol.) and (ii) protein. These are formed much more slowly than the mannolipid. 5. Exogenous mannolipid served as a mannose donor for acceptors (i) and (ii), and it is suggested that transfer of mannose from GDP-mannose to mannosylated protein occurs via two intermediates, the mannolipid and acceptor (i).  相似文献   

19.
The transfer of mannose from GDP[14C]mannose to lipid and to insoluble polymer by a particulate preparation of Phaseolus aureus has been investigated. The evidence favours the lipid being a prenol phosphate mannose. Of a range of prenol phosphates tried, betulaprenol phosphate was the most effective exogenous acceptor of mannose. Most of the insoluble [14C]polymer formed was glycoprotein in nature although small quantities of 14C were associated with glucomannan and galactoglucomannan fractions. Time studies failed to reveal a typical precursor-product relationship between the lipid and polymer fractions but on incubation of [14C]mannolipid with the particulate fraction a small transfer (0·5–0·7%) of [14C] to polymer was detected. p-Hydroxymercuribenzoate inhibited (by 90%) the transfer of [14C] from GDP[14C]-mannoseto polymer and simultaneously increased (3-fold) the [14C] recovered in the lipid fraction. The effect was nullified by mercaptoethanol. Attempts to solubilize the transfer system were only partially successful. The formation of a chromatographically identical mannolipid was demonstrated in particulate fractions of Codium fragile and tomato roots.  相似文献   

20.
Incubation of a mixed membrane fraction isolated from C. albicans yeast cells with Nonidet P-40 at a detergent/protein ratio as low of 0.025 (0.016–0.019%, w/v) yielded a soluble fraction that catalyzed the transfer of mannose from GDP-[14C] Man into dolichol phosphate mannose and from this intermediate into mannoproteins. Over 95% of the sugar in mannoproteins was O-linked as judged from its release after -elimination. Mannose was identified as the sole product after this treatment. Transfer activity did not depend on exogenous lipid acceptor indicating that the latter was solubilized along with the mannosyl transferases. Synthesis of mannolipid and mannoproteins occurred at optima temperatures of 20 °C and 37 °C, respectively, and at a pH in the range of 7.5-9.5. Mannosyl transfer into the mannolipid was stimulated by Mg2+and inhibited by Ca2+and Mn2+whereas mannoprotein labeling was stimulated by Mn2+and to a lower extent by Mg2+. When measured as a function of substrate concentration, the synthesis of the mannolipid was a nearly linear function of GDP-Man concentration in the range of 5 to 32 M whereas protein mannosylation exhibited hyperbolic kinetics with saturation reached at about 10 M. The solubilized preparation was able to utilize an exogenous source of mannolipid as sugar donor for protein mannosylation. Dinucleotides and, to a higher extent trinucleotides, inhibited mannosyl transfer into the mannolipid and hence into mannoproteins.  相似文献   

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