Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:2.4.99.7 (sialyltransferase)
1,534 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Rat liver beta-galactoside alpha-2,6-sialyltransferase and Vibrio cholerae sialidase were used with cytidine-5'-monophospho-N-acetyl-[3H]neuraminic acid (CMP-[3H]NeuAc) to specifically probe the distribution and sialylation state of Gal beta 1-4GlcNAc residues on N-linked saccharides on the surfaces of murine lymphocytes. The relative extent of exogenous sialyltransferase-mediated sialylation (per cellular protein) was thymocytes greater than T-cells greater than T-cell lymphoma (EL-4) greater than B-cells greater than B-cell lymphoma (AKTB-1b) greater than splenocytes. Prior desialylation increased exogenous resialylation by 23.8-, 13.1-, 7.1-, 7.9-, 7.0-, and 5.3-fold for splenocytes, B-cells, T-cells, EL-4, AKTB-1b, and thymocytes, respectively. Though numerous glycoproteins were labeled, the majority of the Gal beta 1-4GlcNAc residues were detected on a relatively small number of cell surface proteins, many of which are well-defined lymphocyte antigens. Gal beta 1-4GlcNAc residues on thymocytes were found to exist in an undersialylated state on T200 but not on other antigens (e.g., Thy-1). T200 was found to be fully sialylated on mature cells (i.e., hydrocortisone-resistant thymocytes and splenic T-cells), suggesting that its sialylation state is developmentally regulated. These studies indicate that the number, sialylation state, and polypeptide distribution of the penultimate structure, Gal beta 1-4GlcNAc, differ on N-linked saccharides on the surfaces of different lymphocyte populations.
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PMID:Surfaces of murine lymphocyte subsets differ in sialylation states and antigen distribution of a major N-linked penultimate saccharide structure. 213 33

The patterns of acidic and neutral glycosphingolipids (GSLs) were examined in a syngeneic tumour system in Balb/c mice consisting of closely related cell lines with different colonisation potentials directed to the murine lungs (in vivo selected highly metastatic sublines of L1-fibrosarcoma cells and their WGA-resistant mutants with low metastatic potential). GSLs were analysed by high-performance thin-layer chromatography and structurally identified by fast atom bombardment mass spectrometry combined with compositional analyses and exo-glycosidase digestion. The results suggest that highly metastatic sublines L1-LM and L1-LM12 derived by in vivo selection from mouse fibrosarcoma cells (cell line L1) exhibit a drastic increase of polar ganglioside expression and a restriction to globo-series GSLs. Contrasting with this the low metastatic mutant cells (L1-LM13WGA) express a reduced portion of acidic GSLs and exhibit a shift to less polar ganglioside components. Total cellular and plasma membrane-integrated GSLs were demonstrated to exhibit largely identical patterns. Concomitant with a significant decrease in LacCer expression a substantial reduction of GM2 and a complete lack of GM3 expression can be assigned to the highly metastatic sublines of L1-cells. On the other hand, the more polar gangliosides GM1a and, to an even greater extent, GD1a (exceeding 70% of total gangliosides) accumulate on L1-LM and their clonal sublines. The shift to acidic GSLs of higher polarity is less pronounced on the low metastatic WGA-resistant mutant cells (L1-LM13WGA) showing a preponderance of GM1a. The portion of GD1a within the fractions of acidic GSLs does not correspond to the cellular activities of CMP-NeuAc/GM1 (alpha 2-3) sialyltransferase measured for high and low metastatic cell variants. Total sialic acid content of the various cell lines differs, but is not associated with the metastatic potential. Gangliosides on L1-cells exhibit a significant substitution of N-glycolyl for N-acetylneuraminic acid (13%) compared to their metastatic sublines and to mutant cells (less than 1%). A conversion of surface exposed GD1a to GM1a on membranes of metastatic cells by in situ treatment with Vibrio cholerae sialidase is associated with a significant reduction of tumour cell colonisation directed to the murine lungs.
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PMID:Glycosphingolipid expression on murine L1-fibrosarcoma cells: analysis of clonal in vivo and in vitro selected sublines with different lung colonisation potential. 237 82

The ninth dorsal root ganglion of adult Xenopus laevis was labeled with N-acetyl-D-[6-3H]mannosamine, and intraaxonal migration of gangliosides was examined by analysis of the chloroform/methanol extract of each of 5-mm consecutive nerve segments by TLC coupled with fluorography. A unique disialoganglioside (GD1 alpha), which amounted to up to 83% of the total ganglioside in this nerve, migrated at 1-2 mm/day at 15 degrees C. This contrasts with the rapid transport of other ganglioside species previously reported in the optic systems of goldfish, rabbits, chickens, and rats. Fluorographic analysis also revealed a trichloroacetic acid-soluble substance migrating at a velocity of approximately 8 mm/day at 15 degrees C. The substance was considered to be CMP-sialic acid on the basis of observations that it comigrates with authentic CMP-N-acetylneuraminic acid in TLC developed with two different solvent systems, it is very labile to weak acid but resistant to neuraminidase from Vibrio cholerae, it is converted to N-acetylmannosamine when treated first with weak acid and subsequently with N-acetylneuraminic acid aldolase, and it has a beta-sialosyl group in its structure. Because CMP-sialic acid is believed to be the sole sialosyl donor in the cells, its migration in axons toward terminals, together with the previous demonstration of sialyltransferase activity in the synaptosomal plasma membrane, strongly supports the possibility that sialosylation of gangliosides and probably of other sialoglycoproteins is not confined to the Golgi apparatus, but can also occur after the compounds are committed to axonal transport.
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PMID:A ganglioside species (GD1 alpha) migrates at a slow rate and CMP-sialic acid severalfold faster in Xenopus sciatic nerve: fluorographic demonstration. 243 59

The Ia+ B cell lymphoma, AKTB-1b, fails to stimulate thymic lymphocytes in a one-way mixed lymphocyte reaction unless pretreated with sialidase or inhibitors of N-linked oligosaccharide processing. A comparison of different sialidases and sialyltransferases suggests that the removal of only a subset of total surface sialic acid, rather than net desialylation of the cell surface, is required. Three sialidases were compared, including Vibrio cholerae (VC) and Clostridium perfringens (CP), which will cleave alpha 2-3, alpha 2-6, and alpha 2-8, sialic acid linkages, and Newcastle Disease virus (NDV), which will remove only alpha 2-3 and alpha 2-8 linked sialic acid. When treated with equivalent units of sialidase, CP-, VC-, and NDV-treated cells were 24-fold, sixfold, and threefold better stimulators than untreated cells. In contrast, VC released 1.3-fold and 2.5-fold more sialic acid per cell than did CP or NDV, respectively. Furthermore, VC was superior in reducing the levels of binding of the sialic acid-specific lectin, Limulus polyphemus agglutinin, in exposing Gal beta 1-3GalNAc and Gal beta 1-4GlcNAc residues, and in desialylating gangliosides. Two-dimensional gel analysis indicated that VC and CP were both equal and superior to NDV in the desialylation of iodinatable cell-surface proteins, including H-2Kk, I-A beta k, and a highly sialylated 65,000 dalton protein of unknown identity. Maximal resialylation of CP-treated cells with exogenously added CMP-NANA and either the alpha 2-3(Gal beta 1-3GalNAc) or alpha 2-6(Gal beta 1-4GlcNAc) sialyltransferase did not reduce the stimulatory capacity of these cells. However, resialylation of VC-treated cells with just CMP-NANA alone resulted in 49% reversal of their stimulatory capacity, and no additional reversal could be achieved with either of the sialyltransferases. Although the alpha 2-6(Gal beta 1-4GlcNAc) sialyltransferase was capable of adding back approximately 10% of the sialic acid removed, the endogenous activity added back approximately 0.1% of the total sialic acid removed. SDS-PAGE gels of the sialylated cells indicated that the exogenously added sialyltransferase labeled many different proteins, whereas the endogenous activity labeled far fewer proteins, predominantly in 46,000 and 25,000 m.w. range. Both the desialylation and resialylation data suggest that the sialidase-dependent stimulation is due to the desialylation of specific membrane structures. Together with previous studies, these data suggest that the sialic acids involved are probably alpha 2-6 linked to N-linked glycosyl moieties.
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PMID:Cell surface sialic acid influences tumor cell recognition in the mixed lymphocyte reaction. 295 14

Recent reports have suggested that the majority of the molecular traffic through the Golgi apparatus is comprised of recycling, rather than newly synthesized, molecules. To evaluate the importance of this recycling pathway in greater detail, we examined the internalization and recycling of cell surface glycoproteins on EL-4 cells, a murine T-cell lymphoma, using sialic acids as covalent markers. Sialic acids were removed from the surface of living cells by exhaustive treatment with Vibrio cholerae sialidase at 4 degrees C and shown to be derived primarily from glycoproteins (93%), with only a small amount from glycolipids (7%). Cells were recultured at 37 degrees C over time and monitored for the resialylation of the cell surface using a sensitive high pressure liquid chromatography adaptation of the thiobarbituric acid assay for sialic acids. The return of sialic acid to the cell surface was found to be contingent upon de novo protein synthesis indicating that the bulk of plasma membrane sialoglycoconjugates do not recycle to an endogenous sialyltransferase-containing compartment for oligosaccharide reprocessing. Identical results were found for K562 cells, a human erythroleukemia cell line. The movement of specific glycoproteins was followed using the enzyme rat liver alpha 2-6Gal beta 1-4GlcNAc sialyltransferase together with CMP-[3H]NeuAc as an impermeant probe of the cell surface. Surface sialoglycoproteins were internalized slowly, a process unaffected by cycloheximide treatment. Only a few of these internalized glycoproteins were found to return to a trans-Golgi compartment followed by recycling to the cell surface. Taken together, these data indicate that the majority of replacement of sialic acids on the cell surface is due to de novo synthesis of glycoproteins and that only a small number of glycoproteins recycle through a trans-Golgi compartment.
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PMID:Intracellular trafficking of cell surface sialoglycoconjugates. 318 95

Rat liver beta-galactoside alpha-2,6-sialyltransferase and Vibrio cholerae sialidase were used, in conjunction with CMP-N-acetyl-[3H]neuraminic acid, to probe the glycoconjugate distribution, sialylation state, and level of penultimate Gal beta 1-4GlcNAc residues on the surfaces of murine thymic lymphocytes. We report a detailed characterization of this sialyltransferase-mediated labeling system. Exogenous sialylation of intact cells is dependent on transferase, sugar nucleotide donor, cell number, and incubation time. Additionally, we have demonstrated that the system labeling the cell surface is noncytotoxic and nonmetabolic and is interacting with the entire cell population. Analysis of the exosialylated structures indicates that the sialyltransferase specifically produces an alpha 2-6 linkage on N-linked oligosaccharides. Using this labeling system, we have probed the cell surface saccharide structures of murine thymocytes and demonstrated that most Gal beta 1-4GlcNAc residues are sialylated in the native state. However, one antigen, T200 (Ly-5), is strikingly undersialylated when compared to other cell surface glycoproteins (e.g., Thy 1.2). Upon analysis of exogenously sialylated oligosaccharides, labeled sialic acid was found almost exclusively on monosialylated structures with the remainder on bisialylated oligosaccharides. This suggests that the purified sialyltransferase is very precise in its recognition of oligosaccharides present on the surface of living thymic lymphocytes. This paper illustrates the combined uses of specific glycosidases and glycosyltransferases and how they can be employed in the detailed study of selected cell surface saccharide structures on living nucleated cells.
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PMID:Sialyltransferases as specific cell surface probes of terminal and penultimate saccharide structures on living cells. 330 6

Numerous investigations suggest that cell surface glycoconjugates, and in particular sialic acids, are directly involved in determining the metastatic phenotype. To further evaluate this hypothesis, we have used a variety of techniques to probe the cell surfaces of several metastatic variants of the murine B16 melanoma that were selected for experimental lung-colonizing ability (Fidler, I. (1973) Nature 242, 148-149) or for their ability to spontaneously metastasize from the site of a subcutaneous injection (Stackpole, C. W., Alterman, A. L., and Fornabaio, D. M. (1985) Invasion & Metastasis 5, 125-142). Using a highly sensitive high performance liquid chromatography sialic acid assay in conjunction with Vibrio cholerae sialidase, we find that none of these metastatic variants differ significantly in their overall levels of cell surface sialic acid. Using highly purified, linkage-specific sialyltransferases, in conjunction with specific glycosidases, to probe the cell surface saccharide topography of specific penultimate oligosaccharides, we also find no significant differences between the efficient lung-colonizing variant, B16-F10 and the poorly-colonizing B16-F1 or B16-Flr variants. In contrast, the spontaneously metastatic variants examined contain substantially different levels of specific penultimate sialylation sites. The tumorigenic but nonmetastatic B16-LM3/G3.26 variant contains 4-fold more penultimate Gal beta 1-3GalNAc sialylation sites than the tumorigenic and highly metastatic B16-LM3/G3.12 variant when CMP[3H]NeuAc and the alpha 2-3Gal beta 1-3GalNAc sialyltransferase are used to probe the melanoma cell surfaces. Several prominent glycoconjugates of apparent Mr 43,000, 40,000, and 30,000 are especially evident upon sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the nonmetastatic cells. The nonmetastatic variant also contains 2-fold more Gal beta 1-4GlcNAc sialylation sites than the metastatic variant when the alpha 2-6Gal beta 1-4GlcNAc sialyltransferase is used as a cell surface probe. In this case, glycoconjugates of apparent Mr 74,000, 45,000, and 43,000 are more prominently observed on the cell surfaces of the nonmetastatic variant. These data indicate that the differences in lung-colonizing abilities of B16 melanoma metastatic variants do not correlate with the numbers or sialylation states of specific penultimate oligosaccharide structures on their surfaces. However, the relative levels of specific penultimate saccharide structures do correlate with the ability of the cells to undergo spontaneous metastasis from a subcutaneous tumor.
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PMID:Cell surface sialylation and tumor metastasis. Metastatic potential of B16 melanoma variants correlates with their relative numbers of specific penultimate oligosaccharide structures. 337 1

Because alterations in cell membrane sialoglycoconjugates can affect the behavior of neoplastic cells, we investigated the effects of in vitro treatment with antimetabolites used in cancer therapy on the expression of membrane sialic acid in cultured HL-60 leukemic cells. In these studies, cells were incubated with Vibrio cholerae neuraminidase to remove surface sialic acid. Reappearance of membrane sialic acid during drug treatment was followed (a) by measuring changes in radioactive surface labeling of viable cells with sodium metaperiodate-sodium[3H]-borohydride, (b) by measuring the decline in accessible surface galactosyl receptor sites which occurred coincident with membrane sialic acid replacement, and (c) by measuring the incorporation of [3H]glucosamine into membrane-associated neuraminidase-labile sialic acid. We were especially interested in learning whether drugs that affect intracellular pools of cytidine triphosphate (CTP), an important nucleotide intermediate in sialylation reactions, could inhibit regeneration of membrane sialic acid. 3-Deazauridine, a competitive inhibitor of CTP synthetase, depleted CTP pools and curtailed surface membrane resialylation with little or no effect on synthesis of de novo sialic acid from precursor sugars. The addition of cytidine restored CTP pools and sialic acid regeneration. Acivicin, a glutamine antagonist, also depleted CTP pools and curtailed surface membrane resialylation. In addition, it retarded de novo synthesis of sialic acid. The addition of cytidine restored intracellular CTP pools and sialic acid regeneration. However, both cytidine and guanosine were required to restore sialic acid synthesis from precursor sugars. 1-beta-D-Arabinofuranosylcytosine, a competitive inhibitor of sialic acid synthetase and of sialyltransferase, inhibited both de novo sialic acid synthesis and membrane resialylation. Only the latter effect was reversed by the addition of exogenous cytidine. Hydroxyurea, an agent shown previously to inhibit glycoconjugate production in hamster fibroblasts, curtailed membrane resialylation and de novo synthesis of sialic acid without depleting CTP pools. Doxorubicin, at levels that caused marked arrest of cell proliferation, had no effect on sialic acid synthesis or expression on the membrane surface. These data suggest that antimetabolites, apart from their cytotoxic effects or effects on cellular growth, may directly inhibit the expression of membrane sialic acid.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Effects of pyrimidine antagonists on sialic acid regeneration in HL-60 cells. 385 65

A murine melanoma variant (B16-F10ir6), resistant to lymphocytic cytolysis, has been shown previously to produce lower numbers of tumor nodules in the lung of C57BL/6J mice following i.v. inoculations. These differences found in tumor implantation and lymphocyte recognition may be due to changes in surface properties of this cell line. Therefore, membrane-bound sialic acid (released by Vibrio cholerae neuraminidase treatment), ectosialyltransferase activity, and total cellular glycosidase levels were measured in this cell line and compared with levels in its parent melanoma tumor cell line, B16-F10, which was selected for its enhanced ability to form tumor nodules. The results of these studies indicate a correlation between the degree of lung implantation and the amount of tumor cell sialic acid accessible to neuraminidase cleavage, tumor cell surface sialyltransferase activity, and several cellular glycosidase activities. These results are consistent with the idea that membrane structural changes in the glycocalyx may account for the ability of a tumor cell to implant and metastasize.
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PMID:A correlation between cell surface sialyltransferase, sialic acid, and glycosidase activities and the implantability of B16 murine melanoma. 723 26

Uroplakin III (UPIII) is one of the major transmembrane glycoproteins exposed at the luminal face of mammalian bladder. We investigated the terminal glycosylation of bovine UPIII in order to ascertain whether it contains the alpha 2,3-sialylated sequence thus potentially serving as a receptor for uropathogenic Escherichia coli expressing type S adhesins. We report the occurrence of sialic acid in alpha 2,3- and alpha 2,6-linkage to galactose in bovine UPIII glycans as evidenced by the sensitivity of UPIII to both Vibrio cholera and Newcastle disease virus neuraminidase and by the colocalization of UPIII antigen and material detected by lectins of Sambucus nigra and Maackia amurensis on the luminal face of the bladder. We also present evidence that UPIII glycans are capped by Gal-alpha 1,3-Gal epitope. Consistently, alpha 2,3- and alpha 2, 6-sialyltransferase, as well as alpha 1,3-galactosyltransferase were found to be present in the cells detached from the luminal side of bovine bladder, which are responsible for the UPIII biosynthesis. The putative role of UPIII sialylated glycans in enhancing the uropathogenicity of E. coli expressing type S adhesins is discussed.
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PMID:Terminal glycosylation of bovine uroplakin III, one of the major integral-membrane glycoproteins of mammalian bladder. 1091 21


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