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Comparison of N-glycosides of fetuins from different species and human .alpha.2-HS-glycoprotein

Authors :
Mark S. Kuhlenschmidt
Thomas J. Reilly
Yuan C. Lee
Kevin G. Rice
Tetsuo Hayase
K.M. Dziegielewska
Source :
Biochemistry. 31:4915-4921
Publication Year :
1992
Publisher :
American Chemical Society (ACS), 1992.

Abstract

Complex type N-glycosides of commercial bovine fetuin preparations from pooled fetal calf serum have been shown to contain comparable amounts of Gal4,4,4TRI (see structure A below) and Gal4,4,3TRI (structure B) as major asialo-structures. To investigate whether there is a clear genetic specificity for synthesis of these oligosaccharides, N-glycosides from two preparations of bovine fetuin, each from a single calf, were examined. Both of these structures were present in each calf, and there was only a subtle quantitative difference in the ratio of these two structures between the calves. Thus, a specific galactosyltransferase, presumably required for the biosynthesis of the Gal4,4,3TRI structure, may exist in both of these individual calves. Comparison of fetuin N-glycosides was also extended to sheep, pig, and human alpha 2-HS-glycoprotein, the human counterpart of bovine fetuin, using high-pH anion-exchange chromatography of the reducing oligosaccharides as well as HPLC of their pyridinylamino derivatives. The N-glycosides of ovine fetuin also have both Gal4,4,4TRI and Gal4,4,3TRI structures in a ratio similar to that of bovine fetuin. However, the major N-glycoside of porcine fetuin is of a fucosyl biantennary complex type structure (structure C below) and human alpha 2-HS-glycoprotein has an N-glycoside which is almost exclusively a nonfucosylated biantennary structure (structure D). This species-specific presence of N-glycosides of fetuins and comparison with N-glycosides of other glycoproteins suggest that the polypeptide sequence of a glycoprotein may affect its N-glycan structure by regulating the activity of specific glycosyltransferases. [formula: see text]

Details

ISSN :
15204995 and 00062960
Volume :
31
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Biochemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....345cae343d6bd4dde5d853efb9305753
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/bi00135a024