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2.
Tetala KK Chen B Visser GM Maruska A Kornysova O van Beek TA Sudhölter EJ 《Journal of biochemical and biophysical methods》2007,70(1):63-69
A simple method for the preparation of an affinity monolithic (also called continuous bed) capillary column for alpha-mannose-specific lectins is described. 2-Hydroxyethyl methacrylate in combination with (+)-N,N -diallyltartardiamide (DATD) and piperazine diacrylamide (PDA, 1,4-bisacryloyl-piperazine) as crosslinkers, were used as monomers for the monolith. After oxidation of DATD with periodate, alpha-mannose with spacer was bound to the aldehyde groups of the polymeric skeleton via reductive amination to form an affinity column for the separation, enrichment or binding studies of mannose-specific lectins. The permeability of the column was excellent. The porosity of the monolith was investigated by scanning electron microscope (SEM) and inverse size exclusion chromatography (ISEC). The affinity of the monolith was evaluated by frontal analysis (FA) and fluorescence microscopy (FM) using fluorescently labeled concanavalin (Con A). Frontal affinity chromatography showed a specific interaction of two different lectins with the alpha-mannose-modified monolith. According to FM the affinity sites were evenly distributed over the monolithic bed. 相似文献
3.
Summary Protoplasts isolated from cell suspension cultures of carrot (Daucus carota L.) and leaves of tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) were treated with three lectins specific for galactosyl residues. After incubation with RCA I (Ricinus communis agglutinin, molecular weight 120,000) conjugated to ferritin or fluorescein, freshly isolated protoplasts displayed heavy labeling of their surfaces. Moreover, they agglutinated rapidly when exposed to low concentrations of RCA I. In parallel studies, PNA (peanut agglutinin) also bound extensively to the protoplast plasma membranes whileBandeiraea simplicifolia lectin I attached relatively weakly. When protoplasts were cultured for two days and then incubated with conjugates of RCA I and PNA, additional binding sites were revealed on the regenerating walls.The results indicate that galactosyl residues are distributed densely over the surface of plant protoplasts. They also allow inferences to be made regarding the positions and linkages of the galactose groups being recognized by the lectins. Moreover, they open up the question whether the galactosyl moieties detected in the wall derive from those labeled on the plasma membrane. To conclude, we make comparisons with binding by concanavalin A, and predict that galactose-recognizing lectins will join and in certain respects prove superior to concanavalin A as probes of the plant cell surface. 相似文献
4.
Summary The localization of two carbohydrate binding proteins, so-called lectins, was studied in the sponge tissue of Axinella polypoides by light and immunofluorescence microscopy. They do not occur at the cellular surface of any cell type, but they are stored in vesicles of the spherulous cells. After short formaldehyde fixation spherulous cells can be isolated and they release the active lectins upon lysis in distilled water.Electron microscopical studies of spherulous cells show that they contain almost nothing else but a small nucleus and vesicles of different size and number. Small vesicles are full of an electron dense material, whereas the content of large vesicles has a fluffy and fibrillar structure. Spherulous cells are large and tightly packed in the outer layer of the ectosome and in the mesh work of the spongin fibres of the central axis. They are small and scattered in the inner layer of the ectosome, and they are found throughout the choanosome. The function of the lectins is not clearly defined, and different alternatives such as participation in glycoprotein synthesis, immunological defense, or carbohydrate transport are possible.This study was supported by a grant from the Deutsche ForschungsgemeinschaftWe are gratefully indebted to Dr. D. Keyser for his help in our electron microscopical studies 相似文献
5.
Summary Fluorescein-conjugated lectins were used to examine the reappearance of glycoproteins on the surface of 8-cell mouse embryos after treatment with proteolytic enzymes. Embryos were decompacted in calcium free medium, treated with various proteases and the process of recompaction monitored. The most effective enzymes in delaying recompaction were subtilopeptidase A and proteinase K at 1 mg/ml; the initiation of recompaction was delayed by about 5 h and 90% recompaction by 14–18 h. Papain and -chymotrypsin were only effective in the absence of calcium. The reappearance of receptors for fluorescein-conjugated Con-A, MPA, RCA-I, FBP, BSL-II and DBA was examined photometrically at 0,8–10 and 17–18 h after proteinase K treatment. There was an increase in binding of MPA, RCA-I, FBP and BSL-II in control embryos during the period of the experiment, between approx. 61 and 80 h post coitum in which embryos passed from the 8-cell stage to the 16–32 cell stage. Con-A binding remained the same and that of DBA decreased. By the time that 50% of enzyme treated embryos had recompacted (8–10 h) binding of Con-A was similar to control embryos. Binding of FBP had almost reached control levels while that of BSL-II, DBA, RCA-I and MPA had reached 60–85% of control levels. When embryos were fully compact (17–18 h) Con-A, FBP and DBA were bound in equal or slightly greater amounts to enzyme treated as to control embryos, and receptors for BSL-II, MPA and RCA-I had recovered almost to control levels. The results clearly show that the recovery of glycoproteins on the surface of 8–16 cell embryos parallels recompaction, providing further evidence for the role of these molecules in compaction. 相似文献
6.
The lateral diffusion of lectin-labelled glycoconjugates was studied in the human colon carcinoma cell line HT29 using fluorescence photobleaching techniques. HT29 cells were grown in either Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium with glucose (25 mM; DMEM-Glu) or with galactose (25 mM; DMEM-Gal). Cell cultivation in the DMEM-Gal medium was assumed to promote a transformation of the cells to become small-intestinal-like with characteristic microvilli and associated enzymes. The diffusion of glycoconjugates labelled with fluoresceinated Triticum vulgaris agglutinin (Wheat germ agglutinin; WGA), Ricinus communis agglutinin-I (RCA-I), Concanavalia ensiformis agglutinin (ConA), Ulex europaeus agglutinin-I (UEA-I) and Arachis hypogaea agglutinin (PNA) was in all cases rapid, with a diffusion constant (D) ranging between 0.4 and 0.8×10-8 cm2 s-1. As a comparison the diffusion of the fluorescent synthetic lipid analog diI-C14 was characterized by D=0.8 – 1.0 × 10–8 cm2 s-1. The diffusion of lectin-labelled surface components could not be related to the presence of microvilli on HT29 cells grown in DMEM-Gal, which ought to yield an apparently lower diffusion rate. The results indicate either that surface glycoconjugates in HT29 cells are dominated by glycolipid, or that the labelled glycoproteins are more or less free to diffuse in the plane of the membrane. 相似文献
7.
The N-glycan-dependent quality control of glycoprotein folding prevents endoplasmic reticulum to Golgi exit of folding intermediates, irreparably misfolded glycoproteins and not completely assembled multimeric complexes. It also enhances folding efficiency by preventing aggregation and facilitating formation of proper disulfide bonds. The control mechanism essentially involves four components, resident lectin-chaperones that recognize monoglucosylated polymannose glycans, a lectin-associated oxidoreductase acting on monoglucosylated glycoproteins, a glucosyltransferase and a glucosidase that creates monoglucosylated epitopes in glycans transferred in protein N-glycosylation or removes the glucose units added by the glucosyltransferase. This last enzyme is the only mechanism component sensing glycoprotein conformations as it creates monoglucosylated glycans exclusively in not properly folded species or in not completely assembled complexes. The purpose of the review is to describe the most significant recent findings on the mechanism of glycoprotein folding and assembly quality control and to discuss the main still unanswered questions. 相似文献
8.
Summary In asexual reproduction of the water mold,Saprolegnia ferax, four distinct and sequentially produced spores are involved in dispersal, two of which are motile and two of which are nonmotile. Composition of cell surface glycoproteins may be important in dispersal strategies for each of these stages. Binding patterns of fluorescently labelled lectins were investigated to identify differences in glycoproteins of asexually produced dispersal stages. The pattern of lectin binding to zoospores was diverse. FITC-Con A bound to surfaces of zoospores and membranes of the water expulsion vacuole system, indicating the prescence of mannosyl and glucosyl residues. In zoospores incubated for more than 30 min in FITC-WGA and FITC-GS II. which bind N-acetyl glucosamine, fluorescence was sometimes localized in peripheral, intracellular patches. In shorter incubations, secondary zoospores bound these lectins along the groove region where K-bodies were located. Surfaces of cystospores typically bound FITC-WGA, but not FITC-GS II. FITC-GS II, however, bound to empty cystospore walls, probably because reactive sugars were available at the inner surface of the wall. Germ tubes emerging from cystospores bound labelled WGA and GS II, but not Con A. The same lectin binding pattern was found along discharge papilla of primary cystospores, indicating that modifications in cystospore walls associated with direct germination and zoospore discharge were similar. Thus, glycoproteins involved in early establishment of the hyphal system differ from those forming the cell surface of cystospores. Differences in the binding pattern of lectins to zoospores and cystospores highlight differences between cell surface carbohydrates of motile and nonmotile asexual stages.Abbreviations BPA
lectin fromBauhinia purpurea
- C1
primary cystospore
- C2
secondary cystospore
- Con A
concanavalin A, lectin fromCanavalia ensiformis
- DBA
lectin fromDolichos biflorus
- DIC
Nomarski differential interference contrast optics
- DS
dilute salts
- FITC
fluorescein isothiocyanate
- FUC
fucose
- Gal
galactose
- GalNAc
N-acetyl galactosamine
- Glc
glucose
- GlcNAc
N-acetyl glucosamine
- GS I
Griffonia simplicifolia lectin I
- GS II
G. simplicifolia lectin II
- Man
mannose
- MPA
lectin fromMaclura pomifera
- PC
phase contrast optics
- PNA
lectin fromArachis hypogaea
- SBA
soybean agglutinin, lectin fromGlycine max
- UEA-1
lectin fromUlex europaeus
- WGA
wheat germ agglutinin fromTriticum vulgare
- WV
water expulsion vacuole 相似文献
9.
Summary The importance of the surface structure and chemistry in zoospores and cysts of oomycetes is briefly reviewed and the organelle systems associated with encystment described. The surface structure and chemistry of primary and secondary zoospores and cysts ofSaprolegnia diclina (a representative saprophytic species) andS. parasitica (a representative salmonid fish pathogen) were explored using the lectins concanavilin A (Con A) and wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) and monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) raised against a mixed zoospore and cyst suspension ofS. parasitica. The binding of lectins and antibodies to spores was determined using immunofluorescence microscopy with fluorescein isothiocyanate-labelled probes and with electron microscopy with gold-conjugated probes applied to spore suspensions post-fixation. In both species Con A, which is specific for glucose and mannose sugars, bound to both the surface of primary and secondary zoospores (the surface glycocalyx) and their cyst coats and readily induced zoospore encystment. The binding to the cysts appeared to be mainly associated with the matrix material released from the primary and secondary encystment vesicles and which appeared to diminish with time. No binding to germ tube walls was observed with this lectin. The MAb labelling showed a generally similar binding pattern to the primary and secondary cysts to that observed with Con A, although the binding to zoospores was more variable. Primary zoospores bound the antibodies but secondary zoospores appeared less reactive. It is suggested that the MAbs share a common epitope with one or more of the Con A-binding components. In both species WGA, which is specific for amongst other things the sugar N-acetyl glucosamine, bound to localised apical patches on the primary zoospores. This lectin also binds to the ventral groove region of secondary zoospores ofS. diclina, which were induced to encyst by this lectin. In contrast secondary zoospores ofS. parasitica were not induced to encyst by the addition of WGA and showed a patchy dorsal binding with this lectin. WGA also binds to both the inner wall of discharged primary cysts and the young germ tube walls of both species. These observations are discussed both in relation to other oomycete spores and to their possible functional and ecological significance.Abbreviations BSA
bovine serum albumin
- Con A
Concanavalin A
- DBA
Dolichos biflorus agglutinin
- ELISA
enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay
- EM
electron microscope
- EV
encystment vesicles
- FCS
foetal calf serum
- FITC
Fluorescein isothiocyanate
- FV
peripheral fibrillar vesicles
- G+F 0.2%
glutaraldehyde and 2.0% formaldehyde primary fixative solution
- 2G 2%
glutaraldehyde primary fixative
- LM
light microscopy
- MAbs
monoclonal antibodies
- LPV
large peripheral vesicles
- PBS
phosphate buffered saline
- PCV
flattened peripheral cisternae
- PEV
primary encystment vesicle
- PIPES
piperazine-N,N1-bis(2-ethane sulfonic acid)
- PNA
Ricinus communis agglutinin
- RAM-FITC/Au10–20
Fluorescein isothiocyanate/gold (10 or 20 nm) labelled rabbit anti-mouse immunoglobulin
- RCA
Ricinus communis agglutinin
- SEM
scanning electron micrograph
- SBA
soybean agglutinin
- SEV
secondary encystment vesicles
- TEM
transmission electron micrograph
- UEA I
Ulex europaeus agglutinin
- WGA
wheat germ agglutinin 相似文献
10.
The organization of the mucomicrovillar complex of the vomeronasal sensory epithelium of adult rats was examined using confocal laser scanning microscopy. In specimens labeled with the FITC-conjugated isolectin B4 of Bandeiraea simplicifolia, which recognizes terminal -galactose sugar residues of glycoconjugates, we demonstrated that the mucomicrovillar complex was composed of islet-like structures with a high-density -galactose core. The mucomicrovillar complex was further resolved into sensory and mucoid components in double-labeling and dual scanning experiments. The sensory component, which consists of the dendritic terminals of olfactory marker protein-immunoreactive vomeronasal receptor neurons, contained cytosolic glycoconjugates with terminal -galactose sugar residues. The extracellular mucoid component consisted of glycoconjugates containing terminal -galactose derived from the glands associated with the vomeronasal organ. These results demonstrated the complex microchemical organization of the sensory and mucoid components of the mucomicrovillar complex. 相似文献