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1.
Two carbohydrate-protein fractions were isolated from the water-soluble biopolymer from opium poppy capsules by chromatography on SP-Sephadex. The carbohydrate chains are composed of arabinose, rhamnose, xylose, mannose, glucose, galactose, galacturonic acid, glucuronic acid and 4-O-methyl glucuronic acid. Methylation analysis indicated a high degree of branching suggesting a very complex structure. Treatment of the glycoprotein with NaOH in the presence of NaBH4 resulted in a significant decrease in the serine and threonine content. The carbohydrate side chains released contained the sugar alcohol, galactitol. These results indicate that polysaccharide chains are linked to protein via serine-O-galactoside linkages.  相似文献   

2.
A glycoprotein of Mr 62 000 was isolated from lung lavage material of patients with alveolar proteinosis. The glycoprotein was found to contain (per molecule) 72 residues of glycine, 5 residues of hydroxyproline, 3 molecules of sialic acid, 4.9 molecules of mannose, 4.0 molecules of galactose, 0.9 molecule of fucose and 7.0 molecules of N-acetylglucosamine. Limited pepsin digestion of the glycoprotein resulted in six peptides, three of which contained hydroxyproline and nearly 30% glycine, and two of which contained all the carbohydrate present in the glycoprotein of Mr 62 000. The three peptides containing hydroxyproline and with high content of glycine contained a repeating -Gly-X-Y-sequence in the peptide chain. Partial amino acid-sequence analyses on the peptides derived from the digestion of the alveolar glycoprotein with various proteolytic enzymes indicate that this glycoprotein is characterized by the presence of alternating collagenous and non-collagenous regions in the same polypeptide chain.  相似文献   

3.
The lipid-free protein residue of rat brain tissue was treated with papain to solubilize the heteropolysaccharide chains of the tissue glycoproteins. The glycopeptides were separated into non-dialyzable and dialyzable glycopeptide preparations. Each preparation was then sorted out into groups of glycopeptides by means of electrophoresis and gel filtration. The quantitatively predominant glycopeptides were the alkali-stable glycopeptides (Group A) which accounted for 64% of the glycopeptide carbohydrate recovered from rat brain. Most of the group A glycopeptides appeared in the non-dialyzable preparation. The molecular weight of the glycopeptides of Group A ranged from approximately 5200–3700. The largest glycopeptide molecule in this mixture possessed the highest electrophoretic mobility and contained one fucose, four N-acetylneuraminic acid (NANA), six N-acetylglucosamine, four galactose, and three mannose residues per molecule. The spectrum of glycopeptides isolated in this group showed a progressive decrease in NANA rsidues, NANA and galactose residues, and NANA, galactose, and N-acetylglucosamine residues which could be correlated with a progressive decline in molecular weight and electrophoretic mobility. Some of the glycopeptides in each fraction recovered from this group of glycopeptides contained sulfate ester groups.A second group of glycopeptides (Group C glycopeptides) accounted for 25% of the total glycoprotein carbohydrate recovered from rat brain. These were recoverd from the dialyzable glycopeptide preparation, and resolved into three fractions by column electrophoresis. These glycopeptides do not contain sulfate, are composed predominately of mannose and N-acetylglucosamine, and possess a molecular weight of approximately 3000.Several minor groups of glycopeptides were detected. Alkali-labile glycopeptides (Group B) appeared in the non-dialyzable glycopeptide preparation. The dialyzable glycopeptide preparation contained glycopeptides (Group E) which contained N-acetylgalactosamine and glucose. These had a molecular weight of approximately 2000. Group D glycopeptides recovered from the dialyzable glycopeptide preparation contained variable amounts of NANA, mannose, galactose, N-acetylglucosamine, and sulfate. These possessed a molecular weight of approximately 2900.  相似文献   

4.
The water-soluble glycoproteins obtained from Cannabis leaves of plants grown from South African seeds have been further studied. Treatment of the glycoprotein fractions with NaOH in the presence of NaBH4, resulted in a significant decrease in the serine content and a corresponding increase in alanine. The carbohydrate side chains released contained the sugar alcohol, galactitol. By treatment of the glycoprotein fractions with NaOH in the presence of Na2SO3, and subsequent acid hydrolysis, cysteic acid was formed. These data indicate that carbohydrate and protein are connected via serine-O-galactoside linkages. Further investigation of the structure of the carbohydrate part of the glycoproteins was carried out by methylation analysis, Smith-degradation and enzyme incubation. The present glycoprotein material of plants grown from South African seeds is similar to the material previously investigated, but in contrast to the latter, it is devoid of hexosamine.  相似文献   

5.
A major glycoprotein 36 000 molecular weight) has been isolated from lung lavage of patients with alveolar proteinosis and found to contain five residues of hydroxyproline, fifty residues of glycine, three residues of methionine, 3 mol of sialic acid, 4.4 mol of mannose, 4.0 mol of galactose, 6.0 mol of glucosamine, and 1 mol of fucose. Cyanogen bromide (CNBr) treatment of the glycoprotein resulted, as expected, in four peptides of apparent molecular weights of 18 000, 12 000, 5000 and 1000, respectively. The chemical compositions of the CNBr peptides indicate the presence of hydroxyproline and high amounts of glycine in all but one of the peptides; two of the four CNBr peptides contain carbohydrate. Gel filtration, acrylamide gel electrophoresis and end-group analyses of the native glycoprotein and its CNBr peptides indicate that the peptides are homogeneous. End-group analyses of the CNBr cleavage products assign the 18 000 molecular weight peptide to the NH2-terminal portion and the 1000 molecular weight peptide to the COOH-terminal portion of the native glycoprotein molecule. Pronase digestion of the 36 000 molecular weight glycoprotein, followed by gel filtration and cation exchange chromatography, resulted in two fractions. One fraction was acidic and contained all the carbohydrate, a high content of aspartic acid and no hydroxyproline. The other fraction was basic and contained 8.4% hydroxyproline, 14% proline, 28% glycine and no carbohydrate, suggesting the presence of collagen-like sequence in the peptide chain. Paper electrophoresis of the basic fraction demonstrated two components, the amino acid compositions of which are identical to those of collagen. Partial amino-terminal sequence analysis of one of the CNBr peptides (18 000 molecular weight) indicated the presence of -Fly-Pro-HyP-Gly-sequence in the peptide chain, which confirms our suggestion that collagen-like regions are present in the native glycoprotein molecule. Limited acid hydrolysis of the acidic fraction and subsequent fractionation of the acid hydrolysate using Dowex column yielded a fraction which produced brown colour with ninhydrin reagent. Paper chromatography of this fraction demonstrated a large component which also stained brown with ninhydrin reagent. After acid hydrolysis, this component was found to consist of equal amounts of asparitic acid and glucosamine, indicating that the N-acetylglucosamine of the oligosaccharides is linked to the asparagine residue of the peptide. No serine or threonine linkages are present.  相似文献   

6.
A soluble glycoprotein of Mr = 80,000 has been isolated from lung lavage of patients with alveolar proteinosis and found to contain 5 residues of hydroxyproline, 91 residues of glycine, 3 residues of methionine, 3.8 molecules of sialic acid, 6 molecules of mannose, 5.9 molecules of galactose, 1 molecule of fucose, and 9.1 molecules of glucosamine. Cyanogen bromide (CNBr) treatment of the glycoprotein resulted in four peptides with molecular weights of 36,000, 27,000, 12,000, and 5,000. The chemical compositions of the CNBr peptides indicated the presence of hydroxyproline and high amounts of glycine in all but one of the peptides; two of the four CNBr peptides contained carbohydrate. Limited trypsin digestion of the glycoprotein of Mr = 80,000 resulted in four peptides with molecular weights of 62,000, 36,000, 26,000 and 18,000, the latter being the NH2-terminal peptide of the native glycoprotein molecule. The peptide of Mr = 26,000 was found to be the COOH-terminal peptide.  相似文献   

7.
Mannose-rich glycopeptides derived from brain glycoproteins were recovered by affinity chromatography on Concanavalin A-Sepharose. These glycopeptides, which adsorb to the lectin and are eluted with α-methylmannoside, constitute about 25–30% of the total glycopeptide material recovered from rat brain glycoproteins. They contain predominately mannose and N-acetylglucosamine (mannose/N-acetylglucosamine = 3), as well as small amounts of galactose and fucose. Approx. 65% of the Concanavalin A-binding glycopeptide carbohydrate was recovered after treatment with leucine aminopeptidase, gel filtration on Biogel P-4, and ion-exchange chromatography on coupled Dowex 50-hydrogen and Dowex 1-chrolide columns. The purified glycopeptide fraction contained six mannose and two N-acetylglucosamine residues per aspartic acid and possessed an apparent molecular weight of about 2000 as assessed by gel filtration and amino acid analysis. Galactose and fucose were absent. Treatment of the purified glycopeptides with α-mannosidase drastically reduced their affinity for Concanavalin A, suggesting the presence of one or more terminal mannose residues.  相似文献   

8.
The lectin from Datura stramonium (thorn-apple; Solanaceae) has been purified by affinity chromatography and shown to be a glycoprotein containing about 40% (w/w) of carbohydrate. The most abundant amino acids are hydroxyproline, cystine, glycine and serine. Results obtained by gel filtration in 6m-guanidinium chloride on Sepharose 4B suggest that it has a subunit mol.wt. of about 30000 and that it probably associates into dimers. The lectin is inhibited specifically by chitin oligosaccharides and bacterial-cell-wall oligosaccharides, but only weakly by N-acetylglucosamine. Glycopeptides from soya-bean (Glycine max) lectin and fetuin are also strong inhibitors of Datura lectin, indicating that it interacts with internal N-acetylglucosamine residues. Its specificity is similar to, but not identical with, that of potato (Solanum tuberosum) lectin. After prolonged proteolytic digestion of reduced and S-carboxymethylated or S-aminoethylated derivatives of the lectin, glycopeptides of mol.wt. of about 18000 were isolated. The glycopeptides contained all the carbohydrate and hydroxyproline of the original glycoprotein, and lesser amounts of serine, S-carboxymethylcysteine and other amino acids. The arabinose residues of the glycoprotein are present as β-l-arabinofuranosides linked to the polypeptide chain through the hydroxyproline residues, and can be removed by mild acid treatment; the ratio of arabinose to hydroxyproline is 3.4:1. Some of the serine residues of the polypeptide chain are substituted with one or two α-galactopyranoside residues, most of which can be removed by the action of α-galactosidase. The galactose residues are more easily removed from the acid-treated glycopeptide (from which arabinose has been removed) than from the complete glycopeptide, indicating a steric hindrance of the galactosidase action by the adjacent chains of arabinosides. There is a slow release of galactose residues by a process of β-elimination in 0.5m-NaOH (pH13.7) from the complete glycopeptide, and a fairly rapid release of galactose by this process from the acid-treated glycopeptide, which lacks arabinose. This is probably due to the inhibitory effect of the negative charge on the adjacent arabinofuranoside residues. The similarities and differences between the lectins from Datura and potato are discussed, as are their structural resemblance to glycopeptides that have been isolated from plant cell walls.  相似文献   

9.
Plasma membranes were isolated from an ascites hepatoma, AH 130 FN, a free-cell type subline of AH 130, by the fluorescein mercuric acetate (FMA) method. Glycopeptides and mucopolysaccharides were prepared from the membranes by pronase digestion then fractionated chromatographically and electrophoretically. Isolated fractions were analyzed for amino acid and carbohydrate compositions. The results were compared with those for corresponding fractions from AH 66 and AH 130 ((1974) J. Biochem. 76, 319-333; (1975) ibid., 78, 863-872). The fraction excluded from Sephadex G-50 contained mucopolysaccharides and a series of glycopeptides. The mucopolysaccharides were identified as chondroitin sulfate A on the basis of their chemical composition, electrophoretic behavior on cellulose acetate and digestibility with chondroitinase AC [EC 4.2.2.5]. This contrasts with previous findings that mucopolysaccharides from the corresponding fractions from AH 130 and AH 66 were heparan sulfate. The chemical composition of the glycopeptides, which showed high contents of threonine, serine, galactose, galactosamine, glucosamine, and sialic acid, indicated the presence of glycopeptides with O-glycosidic linkages. The glycopeptides also contained a small but significant amount of aspartic acid, suggesting that N-glycosidic glycopeptides were also contained in this fraction. The fraction included in Sepnadex G-50 contaoned N-glycosidic glycopeptides as major components, since the carbohydrate moieties were composed of fucose, galactose, mannose, glucosamine, sialic acid, and a smaller amount of galactosamine. The presence of galactosamine suggested that O-glycosidic glycopeptides were present as minor components. Glycopeptides with both O- and N-glycosidic linkages were isolated from AH 130, but not from AH 66.  相似文献   

10.
Polysaccharide fractions from leaves of Coffea arabica var. Mundo Novo were obtained by extraction with 24% potassium hydroxide solution and were found to contain rhamnose, arabinose, xylose, mannose, galactose, glucose, glucuronic acid and 4-O-methylglucuronic acid in different proportions. 2-Acetamido-2-deoxygalactose was detected in all fractions. The structures of the carbohydrate portions were analysed by methylation and Smith degradation. A high amount of 2,3,5-tri-O-methylarabinose and 2,3,4-tri-O-methylxylose units, which are related through end groups, suggested a large degree of branching in the polysaccharide fractions. Glucose was present mainly as (1 → 4)-linked residues, as indicated by the presence of 2,3,6-tri-O-methylglucitol in the hydrolysates of the methylated fractions. A greater proportion of monomethylxylitol in acidic fraction B-IV indicated that it was more branched than the others. The glucose and galactose residues are 4,6- and 3,4-di-O-substituted, respectively. Three successive Smith degradations gave mainly glycerol with some erythritol and threitol. In the linkage of carbohydrate—protein, the presence of O-glycosyl linkages between arabinose and hydroxyproline was indicated. A phenolic compound was detected in all polysaccharide fractions from leaves of the coffee tree and is probably derived from chlorogenic acid.  相似文献   

11.
Mannose-rich glycopeptides derived from brain glycoproteins were recovered by affinity chromatography on Concanavalin A-Sepharose. These glycopeptides, which adsorb to the lectin and are eluted with alpha-methylmannoside, constitute about 25--30% of the total glycopeptide material recovered from rat brain glycoproteins. They contain predominately mannose and N-acetylglucosamine (mannose/N-acetylglucosamine = 3), as well as small amounts of galactose and fucose. Approx. 65% of the Concanavalin A-binding glycopeptide carbohydrate was recovered after treatment with leucine aminopeptidase, gel filtration on Biogel P-4, and ion-exchange chromatography on coupled Dowex 50-hydrogen and Dowex 1-chloride columns. The purified glycopeptide fraction contained six mannose and two N-acetylglucosamine residues per aspartic acid and possessed an apparent molecular weight of about 2000 as assessed by gel filtration and amino acid analysis. Galactose and fucose were absent. Treatment of the purified glycopeptides with alpha-mannosidase drastically reduced their affinity for Concanavalin A, suggesting the presence of one or more terminal mannose residues.  相似文献   

12.
Glycoproteins were extracted with water from leaves of Cannabis sativa grown from seeds of Thailand origin. By ion exchange chromatography the material was separated into a neutral and an acidic fraction. Both glycoprotein fractions contained arabinose, galactose, glucose, mannose and xylose, and in addition rhamnose and galacturonic acid were present in the acidic fraction. The carbohydrate moieties were investigated by methylation analysis and Smith-degradation, whereas the glycopeptide linkage was studied by alkaline hydrolysis in the presence of NaBH4 and Na2SO3, respectively. This linkage was shown to be of the serine-O-galactoside type. The carbohydrate structure is highly branched, the majority of branches terminating in arabinofuranose end groups. Arabinose is also present in the chain, predominantly (1 → 4)- and/or (1 → 5)-linked. Galactose makes up most of the main chain as (1 → 3)-linked residues but also constitutes end groups and branch points, as do mannose and/or glucose. Xylose and rhamnose are present as (1 → 4)- and (1 → 2)-linked units, respectively. Galacturonic acid is assumed to be (1 → 4)- linked with some branching at 3 position. The amino acid hydroxyproline, present in the glycoprotein of South African Cannabis leaves, was absent in the corresponding Thailand material.  相似文献   

13.
The purified allergen preparation representing a certain fraction of an aqueous timothy pollen extractcontained ca. 20% carbohydrate, mainly as arabinose (7%) and galactose (13%). The protein content was 63%. Fractionation on DEAE-Sephadex and Sephadex G-100 gave one neutral and two acidic fractions, all containing protein, arabinose and galactose. The structure of the carbohydrate moiety was investigated by methylation analysis, periodate oxidation and enzyme incubation. The acidic fraction contained (1→6)-linked galactose residues, some being substituted on O-3 with arabinose. The neutral fraction consisted of a more extensively branched arabinogalactan with longer side chains of (1→3)- and (1→5)-linked arabinose. The arabinose was present mainly as α-l-arabinofuranosyl residues. Alkaline degradation and subsequent fractionation indicated the presence of a covalent linkage between hydroxyproline and arabinose. Periodate oxidation or incubation with α-l-arabinofuranosidase did not affect the allergenic activity of the extract.  相似文献   

14.
W A Emerson  S Kornfeld 《Biochemistry》1976,15(8):1697-1703
The major glycoprotein of the bovine erythrocyte membrane was purified by extraction of the ghosts with lithium 3,5-diiodosalicylate followed by phenol-water extraction and acidification. The glycoprotein contains 20% protein and 80% carbohydrate by weight and gives a single band on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels with an estimated molecular weight of 230000 daltons. The carbohydrate composition of the glycoprotein was determined to be (in residues relative to sialic acid): sialic acid, 1.0; fucose, less than 0.01; mannose, 0.1; galactose, 3.3; N-acetylgalactosamine, 0.9; and N-acetylglucosamine, 2.4. Pronase digestion of the isolated glycoprotein followed by Sephadex G-75 gel filtration resulted in the separation of a small pool of glycopeptides (pool III), which included all of the mannose-containing glycopeptides, from the bulk of the glycopeptide material which was in the void fractions of the column (pool I). Alkaline borohydride treatment released over 95% of the oligosaccharide units in pool I and approximately 30% of the oligosaccharide units in pool III. These oligosaccharides were isolated by gel filtration and ion-exchange chromatography. The oligosaccharides released from pool I had molecular weights of 1100-1400 daltons and contained sialic acid, galactose, and N-acetylglucosamine in molar ratios of 0.5-1:3:2 as well as a partial residue of N-acetylgalactosaminitol. The oligosaccharides released from pool III by alkali had molecular weights of 1300-1600 daltons and contained sialic acid, galactose, N-acetylglucosamine, N-acetylgalactosamine and N-ACETYLgalactosaminitol in molar ratios of 1-2:2:1:1:1. These data indicate that the majority of the oligosaccharide units of the bovine erythrocyte glycoprotein are linked O-glycosidically to the peptide backbone of the molecule.  相似文献   

15.
Plasma membranes were isolated from an ascites hepatoma, AH 130, by the fluorescein mercuric acetate (FMA) method. Glycopeptides and mucopolysaccharides were prepared by digesting the membranes with pronase, then by fractionating the digest chromatographically and electrophoretically. Isolated fractions were analyzed for their amino acid and carbohydrate compositions. Results were compared with those for corresponding fractions from AH 66 (J. Biochem. 76, 319-333 (1974)). Mucopolysaccharides and a series of glycopeptides were isolated from the fraction excluded from Sephadex G-50. The mucopolysaccharides were identified as a family of heparan sulfates with different electrophoretic mobilities. The glycopeptides contained serine, threonine, galactose, galactosamine, glucosamine, and sialic acid as the major constituents as aspartic acid and mannose as minor ones. This suggests that most of the carbohydrate moieties are linked to serine or threonine (O-glycosidic), and that some are linked to asparagine (N-glycosidic). No nearly purely O-glycosidic glycopeptides were found in this fraction from AH 130, through they were the major glycopeptides from the AH 66 plasma membranes. In the fraction included in the gel, glycopeptides containing fucose, galactose, mannose, glucosamine, glaactosamine, and sialic acid were found. The presence of galactosamine suggests that some of the glycopeptides are O-glycosidic though most are N-glycosidic. In the corresponding fraction from AH 66, nearly purely N-glycosidic glycopeptides were found.  相似文献   

16.
Myelin was purified from rat brain and sciatic nerve after invivo labeling with [3H]fucose and [14C]glucosamine to provide a radioactive marker for glycoproteins. The glycoproteins in the isolated myelin were digested exhaustively with pronase, and glycopeptides were isolated from the digest by gel filtration on Bio-Gel P-10. The glycopeptides from brain myelin separated into large and small molecular weight fractions, whereas the glycopeptides of sciatic nerve myelin eluted as a single symmetrical peak. The large and small glycopeptide fractions from central myelin and the single glycopeptide fraction from peripheral myelin were analyzed for carbohydrate by colorimetric and gas liquid chromatographic techniques. The glycopeptides from brain myelin contained 2.4 μg of neutral sugar and 0.59 μg of sialic acid per mg total myelin protein, whereas sciatic nerve myelin glycopeptides contained 10 μg of neutral sugar and 3.8 μg of sialic acid per mg total protein. Similarly, the gas-liquid chromatographic analyses showed that the glycopeptides from peripheral myelin contained 4- to 7-fold more of each individual per mg total myelin protein than those from central myelin. Most of the sialic acid and galactose in the glycopeptides from central myelin were in the large molecular weight fraction, and the small molecular weight glycopeptides contained primarily mannose and N-acetylglucosamine. The considerably higher content of glycoprotein-carbohydrate in peripheral myelin supports the results of gel electrophoretic studies, which indicate that the major protein in peripheral myelin in glycosylated while the glycoproteins in purified central myelin are quantitatevely minor components.  相似文献   

17.
N Swaminathan  F Aladjem 《Biochemistry》1976,15(7):1516-1522
Human serum low density lipoprotein (d = 1.027-1.045) was delipidated with organic solvents and the apoprotein digested with thermolysin. The digest was fractionated by gel filtration and DEAE-cellulose chromatography. Two glycopeptides were obtained. One of the glycopeptides (GP-I) contained 2 residues of N-acetylglucosamine and 6 residues of mannose per mole of the glycopeptide, while the other contained 2 sialic acid, 5 mannose, 2 galactose, and 3 N-acetylglucosamine residues per mole of glycopeptide. The results of sequential enzymatic digestion with purified glycosidases, periodate oxidation, and partial acid hydrolysis lead us to propose the following sturctures for the two glycopeptides: (see article). These glycopeptides represent at least 50% of the carbohydrate moiety of LDL.  相似文献   

18.
Carbohydrate units of cell-surface glycoproteins of mouse B- and T-lymphocytes, labelled in their sialic acid residues by the periodate/NaB3H4 method and in their galactose residues by the galactose oxidase/NaB3H4 method after neuraminidase treatment, have been studied. Glycopeptides were prepared from the labelled cells by Pronase digestion and fractionated by concanavalin A affinity chromatography into two fractions (A and B). Alkali-labile oligosaccharides were isolated after mild NaOH/NaBH4 treatment by gel filtration. The alkali-labile oligosaccharides were further analysed by t.l.c. To study the relative proportion of neutral mannose-rich carbohydrate units (fraction C) in lymphocyte glycoproteins, glycopeptides were also prepared from unlabelled cells and subjected to concanavalin A affinity chromatography after N-[3H]acetylation of their peptide moiety. The major alkali-labile oligosaccharide component of both cell types was identified as galactosyl-(beta 1 leads to 3)-N-acetylgalactosaminitol. T-Lymphocytes were characterized by a high proportion of this oligosaccharide and a lower proportion of alkali-stable fraction A glycopeptides, whereas the opposite was observed for B-lymphocytes. The relative proportions of the concanavalin A-binding fractions B and C were similar in both cell types. The differences observed may correlate with the different surface properties of B- and T-lymphocytes.  相似文献   

19.
Sulfated glycopeptides were isolated from pronaisc and tryptic digests of egg shell membranes and hen oviduct. They were precipitated by cationic detergents and separated by preparative electrophoresis, after removal of small quantities of glucuronoglycosaminoglycans detected only in the oviduct (isthmus and magnum). The principal isolated sulfated glycopeptides were divided according to increasing electrophoretic mobilities into two groups A and B. The homogeneity of the purified glycopeptides was confirmed by gel filtration and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis.Glycopeptides from pool preparation of tissue are analysed and carbohydrate and amino acids average values are estimated. Hexosamines (mainly N-acetylglucosamine), hexoses (galactose, glucose, mannose) and fucose were found in Glycopeptides A. The molar ratio of hexose/hexosamine was 0.4. N-Acetylneuraminic acid and sulfate were also present in Glycopeptides A. The molar ratio of sulfate/hexosamine ranged from 0.1 to 0.25. The Glycopeptides A composition indicated the presence of chains with many glycosyl groups and a few of amino acids residues. The carbohydrate components of Glycopeptides B from egg shell membranes and magnum were found to be hexosamines (N-acetylgalactosamine and N-acetylglucosamine in equimolar proportions), hexoses (galactose mainly and glucose), N-acetylneuraminic acid, and fucose. The molar ratio of hexose/hexosamine was 1. Sulfate was also present and the molar ratio of N-acetylneuraminic acid and sulfate to hexosamine was ranged from 0.8 to 1. The main amino acid residues in these glycopeptides were serine and threonine with destruction of these hydroxyamino acids during alkali treatment. Glycopeptides B probably consist of short carbohydrate chains, linked to the polypeptide through O-glycosidic bonds involving N-acetylgalactosamine and serine and threonine. Approximately 40% of the amino acid residues were linked to carbohydrate chains.Glycopeptides B from egg shell membranes magnum and egg white were very similar in their carbohydrate and amino acid composition and in their properties.Gylcopeptides A from egg shell membranes, isthmus and magnum showed similarities and divergences especially in the amino acid composition. These results suggest that magnum and isthmus in oviduct are both concerned with the synthesis of egg shell membrane glycoproteins.  相似文献   

20.
Six glycopeptide fractions namely GP-C1, GP-C2. GP-C3a.GP-C3b.GP-D, and GP-D2 were isolated after exhaustive digestion of glucoamylase II (Glucozyme) fromAspergillus niger with pronase. They were purified using gel-filtration. high-voltage paper electrophoresis and ion-exchange chromatography on Dowex-50 and Dowex-1. They appeared homogeneous on electrophoresis under different conditions of pHs. The molecular weights ranged from 1600 and 4000 for these glycopeptides. Ally of them contained serine at the N-terminal end. Serine and threonine were the major amino acids with glycine, alanine, proline and tryosine present as minor constituents. Carbohydrate analysis revealed the presence of different sugars. Based on this, the glycopeptides were grouped into three types: (1) GP-C1 and GP-C2 containing mannose, glucose and galactose; (2) GP-C3a, and GP-C3b,containing mannose glucose and glucosamine; and (3) GP-D1 and GP-D2, containing mannose. glucose, galactose and xylose. Most sugar constituents in each glycopeptide occured in non-integral ratios implying a microheterogeneity of the carbohydrate moiety inAspergillus niger glucoamylase.  相似文献   

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