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Query: EC:2.4.99.6 (
sialyltransferase
)
1,546
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Levels of
glycoprotein
:
sialyltransferase
activity (EC 2.4.99.1; CMP-acetyl-neuraminate:D-galactosyl-
glycoprotein
N-acetylneuraminyl-transferase) were measured in plasma of patients with neoplastic disease, and were found elevated above normal control values in 85% of patients examined. There was a correlation between enzyme levels and course of disea-e in 46 of 57 patients studied serially during therapy. Plasma
sialyltransferase
may be a useful marker enzyme for monitoring effectiveness of therapeutic programs for disseminated neoplasms.
...
PMID:Alterations in plasma sialyltransferase levels in patients with neoplastic disease. 91 50
Two variant mouse L cell lines (termed CL 3 and CL 6) have been selected for resistant to ricin, a galactose-binding lectin with potent cytotoxic activity. The resistant lines exhibit a 50 to 70% decrease in ricin binding and a 300- to 500-fold increase in resistance to the toxic effects of ricin. Crude membrane preparations of CL 3 cells have increased sialic acid content (200% of control), while the galactose, mannose, and hexosamine content is within normal limits. Both the glycoproteins and glycolipids of CL 3 cells have increased sialic acid, with the GM3:lactosylceramide ratios for parent L and CL 3 cells being 0.29 and 1.5, respectively. In contrast, the membranes of CL 6 cells have a decrease in sialic acid, galactose, and hexosamine content with mannose being normal. Both cell lines have specific alterations in glycosyltransferase activities which can account for the observed membrane sugar changes. CL 3 cells have increased CMP-sialic acid:
glycoprotein
sialyltransferase
and GM3 synthetase activities, while CL 6 cells have decrease UDP-GlcNAc:glycoproteinN-acetylglucosaminyltransferase and DPU-galactose:
glycoprotein
galactosyltransferase activities. The increased sialic acid content of CL 3 cells serves to mask ricin binding sites, since neuraminidase treatment of this cell line restores ricin binding to essentially normal levels. However, the fact that neuraminidase-treated CL 3 cells are still 45-fold resistant to ricin indicates that either a special class of productive ricin binding sites is not being exposed or that the cell line has a second mechanism for ricin resistance.
...
PMID:Isolation and characterization of two mouse L cell lines resistant to the toxic lectin ricin. 100 11
Incubation of mouse thymocytes with mitogenic concentrations of concanavalin A causes a 2-fold increase in cell-surface-associated (but not total cell)
sialyltransferase
activity (ectosialyltransferase, CMP-N-acetylneuraminate:D-galactosyl-
glycoprotein
N-acetylneuraminyltransferase, EC 2.4.99.1) as judged by incorporation of [14C]sialic acid into endogenous cell acceptors and into added desialylated fetuin acceptor. The concanavalin-A-induced enhancement of enzymic activity is essentially complete within 1 hr after addition of mitogen and remains at elevated levels for 12 hr, declining rapidly thereafter. Intact cells labeled previously with [14C]sialic acid and then incubated briefly with hydrolytic enzymes, including neuraminidase and insoluble trypsin, released 43-66% of total cell-associated radioactivity without appreciably changing cell viability. Alterations in
sialyltransferase
activity due to concanavalin A treatment could not be explained by a mitogen-mediated (a) uptake of radioactive precursors, (b) cell death, (c) increased product catabolism, or (d) activation of
sialyltransferase
by mitogen binding to the enzyme. Furthermore, the process does not require active protein synthesis. The results are consistent with a rapid concanavalin-A-induced exposure of potential enzymic activity that was previously inaccessible to substrate.
...
PMID:Effect of concanavalin A on expression of cell surface sialyltransferase activity of mouse thymocytes. 108 27
alpha 1-Antitrypsin phenotypes Pi M and Z, purified by the thiol-disulfide exchange procedure, were desialylated by treatment with neuraminidase covalently coupled to Sepharose and used as acceptors of sialic acid in an assay system for serum sialic acid transferase (CMP-N-acetylneuraminate:D-galactosyl-
glycoprotein
N-acetylneuraminyltransferase, EC 2.4.99.1) activity. Both asialoantitrypsins were equally effective as acceptors in contrast to native Pi Z antitrypsin which did not accept any sialic acid. Serum
sialyltransferase
activity was determined in 38 adult alpha 1-antitrypsin deficient individuals (Pi Z, MZ, FZ, SZ) with normal liver function and was found to be of the same magnitude as the activity in normal individuals (Pi M). Equal activities were also found in 5 Pi Z patients with cirrhosis of the liver. The results strongly argue against the concept that
sialyltransferase
deficiency provides the molecular basis for alpha 1-antitrypsin deficiency.
...
PMID:The serum sialyltransferase activity in alpha 1-antitrypsin deficiency. 108 69
Carbohydrate compositions of the membrane and cytoplasmic fractions of human normal and cancerous colonic mucosa were compared in patients with blood groups O and B. The total sugar content in both fractions was reduced in the cancer tissues to about one-third of that in the normal colonic mucosa. The sugars that are associated with mucinous glycoproteins such as fucose and N-acetylgalactosamine were reduced significantly, while sugars that are primarily associated with "serum-type" glycoproteins were relatively unchanged or reduced to a lesser extent. The activities of
glycoprotein
:glycosyltransferases were variable, some showing so significant change, others beinb significnatly reduced in cancerous tissues. A polypeptidyl:N-acetylgalactosaminyltransferase (an enzyme that catalyzes the transfer of the first sugar to hydroxyamino acids of the protein core of mucinous glycoproteins), a
sialyltransferase
(involved in the addition of sialic acid to mucinous glycoproteins), and a galactoxyltransferase (thought to be responsible for blood group B antigenicity) were reduced in the cancerous colonic tissue. In contrast, the activities of these glycosyltransferases were unchanged in the colonic mucosa of patients with granulomatosis or ulcerative colitis. Glycosidase activities in the normal, cancerous, and inflammatory tissues were the same. These results suggest that in colonic cancer tissues the synthesis of one type of oligosaccharide chain may be greatly affected, while another family of oligosaccharides may remain relatively unaffected.
...
PMID:Glycoprotein metabolism in inflammatory and neoplastic diseases of the human colon. 114 23
The postnatal developmental profiles of the protein-bound sialic acid content and the activities of CMP-N-acetylneuraminic acid (CMP-AcNeu) synthetase (EC 2.7.7.43) and
glycoprotein
sialyltransferase
, enzymes involved in sialoglycoprotein biosynthesis, were estimated in the rat brain. The sialoglycoprotein level appeared to increase 2-fold from birth to about 20 days of age, which correlates with the outgrowth of the cell processes in this period. In contrast, the activities per g wet tissue of the enzymes were highest at birth and showed decreasing tendencies during maturation. This revealed that, at least at a certain stage during development, the
sialyltransferase
is present in structures other than synaptic membranes, since the new-born rat brain is devoid of these membranes. The developmental profile of the endogenous, sialic acid accepting molecules was very similar to that of the sialoglycoproteins. It was concluded that cerebral sialoglycoprotein biosynthesis during postnatal development is not limited by the activities of the synthetase and the transferase, but may largely depend on the production of the endogenous acceptors, which are presumed to be the natural precursors for the sialoglycoproteins.
...
PMID:Sialoglycoprotein synthesis in developing rat brain. 117 8
CMP-N-acetylneuraminic acid:
glycoprotein
sialyltransferase
activities were assayed in rat liver microsomal fractions using desialylated fetuin as the substrate acceptors for N-acetylneuraminic acid. It was found that cytidine nucleotides specifically depressed enzyme activities. CMP was shown to act as a competitive inhibitor with an apparent Ki of 0.62 mM. N-Acetylneuraminic acid at 1.15 mM had no effect on enzyme activities. Uridine nucleotides at 1.15 mM, especially UDP, increased enzyme activities. UDP may act as an allosteric activating agent increasing the apparent V. Other nucleotides, sugars and nucleotide-sugars at similar concentrations affected
sialyltransferase
activities only slightly. A general mechanism is proposed for the regulation of glycosyltransferase activities by free nucleotides.
...
PMID:Regulation of rat-liver glycoprotein: N-acetylneuraminic acid transferase activity by pyrimidine nucleotides. 118 47
A solid-phase assay for the activity of CMPNeuAc:Gal beta 1-4GlcNAc-R alpha-2,6-
sialyltransferase
(2,6ST) has been developed. In the assay an acceptor
glycoprotein
is immobilized onto microtiter plate wells. The two
glycoprotein
acceptors used were asialofetuin (ASF), which contains oligosaccharides terminating in the sequence Gal beta 1-4GlcNAc-R, and a neoglycoprotein of bovine serum albumin containing covalently attached Gal beta 1-4GlcNAc-R units. Samples containing the donor CMPNeuAc and the 2,6ST were incubated with the immobilized acceptor to generate the product NeuAc alpha 2-6Gal beta 1-4GlcNAc-R. The product was detected by a biotin-streptavidin system using the biotinylated plant lectin Sambucus nigra agglutinin (SNA), which binds to sialic acid in alpha-2,6, but not in alpha-2,3, linkage. The biotinylated SNA bound to the product was then detected with streptavidin and biotinylated forms of either alkaline phosphatase or the recombinant bioluminescent protein aequorin. The assay was optimized with respect to the commercially available 2,6ST and shown to be dependent on the concentration of acceptor and CMPNeuAc and proportional to the 2,6ST activity in the range of 20 to 400 microU in a 1-h assay. The solid-phase assay also allows for the selective detection of 2,6ST activity in human and fetal bovine serum, where the activity was proportional in the range of 0.1 to 2 microliters of serum.
...
PMID:A solid-phase assay for the activity of CMPNeuAc:Gal beta 1-4GlcNAc-R alpha-2,6-sialyltransferase. 128 7
We investigated the glycoconjugates of the human bronchial glands at light and electron microscopic level by means of lectin histochemistry in combination with neuraminidase digestion and beta-elimination reaction. Both direct and indirect techniques using lectin-peroxidase, lectin-gold, and
glycoprotein
-gold complexes were applied. The binding pattern of the six lectins (ConA, HPA, DSA, WGA, LEA, and PNA) used in the present study suggests that mucous and serous cells of human bronchial glands contain both N- and O-glycosylated proteins in the secretory granules. Asparagine-linked oligosaccharides containing Gal(beta-1,4) GlcNAc and Man residues were abundant in serous cells. The demonstration of both the terminal Neu 5Ac (alpha-2,3, or 6) Gal (beta-1,4) GlcNAc sequence in the N-linked oligosaccharides of mucous cells and the terminal disaccharide Gal (beta-1,4) GlcNAc in the N-linked oligosaccharide chains of serous cells suggests the existence of complex type sugar chains N-glycosidically linked to the peptide region of the glycoproteins. The binding pattern of the DSA and the neuraminidase-DSA sequence provides evidence for the existence of
sialyltransferase
activity in the forming mucous granules of mucous bronchial cells.
...
PMID:Ultrastructural localization of glycoconjugates in human bronchial glands: the subcellular organization of N- and O-linked oligosaccharide chains. 155 69
Sialyltransferases (CMP-N-acetylneuraminic acid:
glycoprotein
sialyltransferases, EC 2.4.99.1) are involved in the transfer of a sialic acid moiety from CMP-N-acetylneuraminic acid (CMP-NeuAc) to an oligosaccharide side-chain of an acceptor, asialoglycoprotein (AGP), according to the following reaction: CMP-NeuAc + AGP----NeuAc-O-AGP + CMP. This enzyme occurs in elevated levels in the sera of patients with a wide variety of neoplastic diseases and its assay might be useful in monitoring treatment. Radioactive CMP-NeuAc has been used in assays and the radioactive sialylated product separated and counted by liquid scintillation spectrometry. This study shows that a simple, rapid, non-radiochemically based high-performance liquid chromatographic method developed for the analysis of CMP-sialic acid synthetase can be used for the quantitation of
sialyltransferase
activity by monitoring simultaneously the utilization of CMP-NeuAc and the release of CMP. We describe the application of this method to assay of commercially available
sialyltransferase
activity and to activities from synovial, ascites and gastric fluids.
...
PMID:Assay of sialyltransferase activity by reversed-phase ion-pair high-performance liquid chromatography. 156 2
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