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

Two mouse L cell variant lines (CL 3 and CL 6) selected for resistance to the toxic plant lectin ricin were restricted in their ability to replicate the two alphaviruses Sindbis virus and Semliki Forest virus. CL 3 cells have been shown to exhibit increased CMP-sialic acid:glycoprotein sialyltransferase and GM3 synthetase activities, whereas CL 6 cells have been shown to contain decreased UDPgalactose:glycoprotein galactosyltransferase and UDP-N-acetylglucosamine:glycoprotein N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase activities. The adsorption of Sindbis virus to CL 6 cells was considerably reduced, suggesting that the loss or inaccessibility of the receptors for Sindbis virus accounted for a major defect in virus production in these cells. In contrast, CL 3 synthesized Sindbis viral RNA and proteins but were unable to convert the precursor glycoprotein PE2 to the structural protein E2. The cleavage of PE2 to E2 was also blocked in both CL 3 and CL 6 cells infected with Semliki Forest virus.
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PMID:Restricted replication of two alphaviruses in ricin-resistant mouse L cells with altered glycosyltransferase activities. 21 29

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.
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PMID:Isolation and characterization of two mouse L cell lines resistant to the toxic lectin ricin. 100 11

The glycosyltransferases controlling the biosynthesis of cell-surface complex carbohydrates transfer glycosyl residues from sugar nucleotides to specific hydroxyl groups of acceptor oligosaccharides. These enzymes represent prime targets for the design of glycosylation inhibitors with the potential to specifically alter the structures of cell-surface glycoconjugates. With the aim of producing such inhibitors, synthetic oligosaccharide substrates were prepared for eight different glycosyltransferases. The enzymes investigated were: A, alpha(1----2, porcine submaxillary gland); B, alpha(1----3/4, Lewis); C, alpha(1----4, mung bean); D, alpha(1----3, Lex)-fucosyltransferases; E, beta(1----4)-galactosyltransferase; F, beta(1----6)-N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase V; G, beta(1----6)-mucin-N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase ("core-2" transferase); and H, alpha(2----3)-sialyltransferase from rat liver. These enzymes all transfer sugar residues from their respective sugar nucleotides (GDP-Fuc, UDP-Gal, UDP-GlcNAc, and CMP-sialic acid) with inversion of configuration at their anomeric centers. The Km values for their synthetic oligosaccharide acceptors were in the range of 0.036-1.3 mM. For each of these eight enzymes, acceptor analogs were next prepared where the hydroxyl group undergoing glycosylation was chemically removed and replaced by hydrogen. The resulting deoxygenated acceptor analogs can no longer be substrates for the corresponding glycosyltransferases and, if still bound by the enzymes, should act as competitive inhibitors. In only four of the eight cases examined (enzymes A, C, F, and G) did the deoxygenated acceptor analogs inhibit their target enzymes, and their Ki values (all competitive) remained in the general range of the corresponding acceptor Km values. No inhibition was observed for the remaining four enzymes even at high concentrations of deoxygenated acceptor analog. For these latter enzymes it is suggested that the reactive acceptor hydroxyl groups are involved in a critical hydrogen bond donor interaction with a basic group on the enzyme which removes the developing proton during the glycosyl transfer reaction. Such groups are proposed to represent logical targets for irreversible covalent inactivation of this class of enzyme.
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PMID:Evaluation of deoxygenated oligosaccharide acceptor analogs as specific inhibitors of glycosyltransferases. 191 26

The Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome (WAS) is an X-linked recessive immunodeficiency affecting B lymphocytes, T lymphocytes, and platelets. Previous studies on lymphocytes from WAS patients have revealed that leu-kosialin (CD43), a cell-surface glycoprotein bearing approximately 90 O-linked oligosaccharide chains, shows an aberrant electrophoretic mobility. To determine whether this finding reflects a different pattern of O-linked glycosylation in WAS cells, we have compared healthy individuals and WAS patients with respect to glycosyltransferase activities in T lymphocytes, platelets, and Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-immortalized B cell lines. Stimulation of peripheral T cells from normal individuals in vitro with anti-CD3 antibodies and interleukin-2 was associated with a 3-fold increase in UDP-GlcNAc:Gal beta 3GalNAc-R (GlcNAc to GalNAc) beta 6-N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase (core 2 GlcNAc-T) from 0.8 to 2.2 nmol/mg/h. In contrast, peripheral T lymphocytes from WAS patients showed an inversion of this phenotype with high core 2 GlcNAc-T activity in unstimulated cells (2.3 nmol/mg/h) and a 2-3-fold decrease in activity following stimulation. Core 2 GlcNAc-T activity was also three times higher in platelets from WAS patients than in normal platelets. Glycosyltransferase activities were measured in immortalized B cell lines established from WAS and normal subjects by infection with EBV. Core 2 GlcNAc-T was less than 0.4 nmol/mg/h in WAS EBV-B cell lines compared to 2.4 nmol/mg/h in EBV-B cell lines from healthy individuals, In contrast, CMP-SA:SA alpha 2-3Gal beta 1-3GalNAc-R (where SA represents sialyl (sialic acid to GalNAc) alpha 6-sialyltransferase II activity was 2.0 nmol/mg/h in the WAS EBV-B cell and less than .01 nmol/mg/h in EBV-B cell lines derived from normal subjects. Eleven other glycosyltransferase activities were measured and found to be similar in EBV-B cell lines from WAS and normal individuals. Polylactosamine sequences were much reduced in the O-linked oligosaccharides of CD43 from WAS EBV-B cells consistent with decreased core 2 GlcNAc-T activity and expression of core 1 oligosaccharides in the cells. In conclusion, B cells, T cells, and platelets in WAS patients show abnormal expression of two developmentally regulated glycosyltransferases, consistent with the idea that the WAS immunodeficiency is due to a failure of normal lymphocyte maturation.
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PMID:Aberrant O-linked oligosaccharide biosynthesis in lymphocytes and platelets from patients with the Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome. 200 80

The activities of ten enzymes involved in sialic acid metabolism were measured in colonic mucosal cells from rats and compared with those in liver. A methodology was devised that enabled all ten enzyme activities to be evaluated in a single rat colon preparation. Enzyme assays with radioactively labelled substrates were developed for maximum sensitivity, and the identification of substrates and products was carefully checked to assess the contribution of contaminants to enzyme reactions with low activity. The activities of most enzymes involved in the biosynthesis of N-acetyl-D-neuraminic acid (NeuAc) from UDP-N-acetyl-D-glucosamine were found to be more than 20-fold lower than those in liver. The activities of CMP-NeuAc synthase, N-acetyl-D-glucosamine 2-epimerase, N-acetyl-D-glucosamine kinase, sialyltransferase and sialidase were similar to or 2-4-fold lower than in liver. The biosynthesis of NeuAc via its 9-phosphate was demonstrated in the 100 000 g supernatant of colonic-cell homogenates by enzymic assay and precursor experiments with N-acetyl[14C]-mannosamine. No alternative route for NeuAc formation could be detected. The 100 000g supernatant fractions of liver, kidney and colonic mucosal cells utilized N-acetyl[14C]mannosamine with differing efficiencies. Radioactive products identified as sialic acid biosynthetic intermediates amounted to 49%, 0.04% and 5.6% of added precursor in liver, kidney and colon respectively. Catabolism of labelled precursor to non-hexosamine products was high in kidney and colonic mucosal-cell fractions.
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PMID:The metabolism of sialic acids in isolated rat colonic mucosal cells. 397 62

The postnatal development of skeletal muscle is characterized by changes in membrane function associated with N-linked glycoproteins. In the present study, early reactions involved in the synthesis of the dolichol-linked core oligosaccharide were examined in neonatal and adult rabbit skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum membranes. The initial rate of N-acetylglucosamine incorporation in the presence of exogenous dolichol phosphate was similar between neonate and adult (3.5-4.1 pmol of GlcNAc/min/mg). The Km values for UDP-GlcNAc and exogenous dolichol phosphate were similar. Tunicamycin (0.04-0.08 micrograms/ml) inhibited N-acetylglucosamine incorporation by 50%. UDP-GlcNAc pyrophosphatase activity was greater in neonatal membranes than adult (840 versus 350 pmol of GlcNAc-1-P/min/mg), explaining, in part, the greater enhancement of neonatal GlcNAc incorporation by pyrophosphatase inhibitors. Nucleotide-sugar pyrophosphatase inhibitors (alpha, beta-methylene ATP and dimercaptopropanol) increased the capacity of neonatal activity 4-fold and adult enzyme 2-fold. Analysis of dolichol-linked products by mild acid hydrolysis however, revealed that neonate had higher capacity for N,N'-diacetylchitobiosyl(pyro)phosphoryldolichol synthesis than adult. Mannosyltransferase and glucosyltransferase were elevated 6- and 5-fold in neonate compared to adult membranes. Neonate exhibited 4-fold greater GDP-Man pyrophosphatase activity than adult (500 versus 125 pmol of Man-1-P/min/mg). The Km for GDP-Man increased in the presence of exogenous dolichol phosphate. Increasing concentrations of exogenous dolichol phosphate did not equalize neonate and adult mannosyltransferase activity, indicating that the decline in activity during development was not due to a decrease in a pool of dolichol phosphate accessible to mannosyltransferase. Glucosyltransferase for the synthesis of glucosylphosphoryldolichol was also elevated 5-fold in neonatal compared to adult sarcoplasmic reticulum (7 versus 1.4 pmol of Glc/min/mg). In a previous study, it was reported that glycoprotein sialyltransferase activity decreased by a factor of 6.5 during the postnatal maturation and that total membrane hexose content of sarcoplasmic reticulum decreased by a factor of 8. Together, these results suggest that the postnatal development of skeletal muscle is characterized by coordinated changes in the expression of enzymes involved in both the "early" and "late" reactions of N-linked oligosaccharide biosynthesis.
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PMID:Formation of dolichol-linked sugar intermediates during the postnatal development of skeletal muscle. 631 23

Golgi vesicle membranes from the Lec2 CHO glycosylation mutant translocate CMP-sialic acid at only 2% the rate of vesicles from wild-type CHO cells. The deficiency is specific, because vesicles from Lec2 cells can translocate UDP-N-acetylglucosamine, adenosine 3'-phosphate 5'-phosphosulfate, and UDP-galactose at rates comparable to those of vesicles from wild-type cells. Complementation analyses show that Lec2 mutants belong to the same genetic complementation group as clone 1021, a CHO mutant of similar phenotype. Both mutants have previously been shown to have a 90% reduction in the sialylation of glycoproteins and gangliosides compared with wild-type cells. However, 1021 cells appear to have normal levels of CMP-sialic acid, sialyltransferase activity, and endogenous acceptors for sialylation. It seems likely that the primary defect in Lec2 and 1021 cells is their inability to translocate CMP-sialic acid across Golgi vesicle membranes.
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PMID:Translocation across Golgi vesicle membranes: a CHO glycosylation mutant deficient in CMP-sialic acid transport. 649 37

The product of the MUC1 gene, the polymorphic epithelial mucin (PEM) is aberrantly glycosylated in breast and other carcinomas, resulting in exposure of normally cryptic peptide epitopes. PEM expressed by breast cancer cells contains more sialylated O-glycans and has a lower GlcNAc content than that expressed by normal cells. The exposure of peptide epitopes is thus thought to be due to the sugar side chains being shorter on the tumour-associated mucin. To investigate possible mechanisms underlying the different pattern of glycosylation in breast cancer cells, we analysed the pathways involved in the biosynthesis of O-glycan chains of mucins in normal and cancerous mammary epithelial cells. An immortalized mammary epithelial cells line originating from normal human milk. MTSV1-7, and three human breast cancer cell lines, BT20, MCF-7 and T47D, were studied. Glycosyltransferase activities assembling, elongating and terminating O-glycan core-1 [Gal beta 1-3GalNAc alpha-R] and core-2 [GlcNac beta 1-6 (Gal beta 1-3) GalNAc alpha-R] were present in the normal mammary cell line. Many of the glycosyltransferase activities were also expressed at variable levels in breast cancer cells. However, a sialyltransferase activity (CMP-sialic acid Gal beta 1-3GalNAc alpha 3-sialyltransferase) was increased several fold in all three cancer cell lines. Moreover, mammary cancer cell lines BT20 and T47D have lost the ability to synthesize core-2, as shown by the lack of UDP-GlcNAc: Gal beta 1-3GalNAc (GlcNAc to GalNAc) beta 6-GlcNAc-transferase activity, which corresponded to the absence of the mRNA transcript. However, MCF-7 breast cancer cells expressed this enzyme. Thus, the mechanism for the exposure of peptide epitopes in BT20 and T47D cells is proposed to be the loss of core-2 branching leading to shorter, sialylated O-glycan chains. A different mechanism is proposed for MCF-7 breast cancer cells.
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PMID:Mechanisms underlying aberrant glycosylation of MUC1 mucin in breast cancer cells. 758 8

In searching for the gonococcal sialyltransferase gene(s), we cloned a 3.8-kb DNA fragment from gonococcus strain MS11 that hybridized with the oligonucleotide JU07, which was derived from the conserved C terminus of the sialyl motif present in mammalian sialyltransferases. Sequencing of the fragment revealed four putative open reading frames (ORFs), one of which (ORF-1) contained a partial sialyl motif including the amino acid sequence VGSKT, which is highly conserved among sialyltransferases. The gene was flanked by two inverted repeats containing the neisserial DNA uptake sequence and was preceded by a putative sigma 54 promoter. Database searches, however, revealed a high degree of homology between ORF-1 and the N-acetylglucosamine 1-phosphate uridyltransferase (GlmU) of Escherichia coli and Bacillus subtilis and not with any known sialyltransferase. This homology was further established by the successful complementation of an orf-1 mutation by the E. coli glmU gene. Enzyme assays demonstrated that ORF-1 did not possess sialyltransferase activity but mimicked GlmU function catalyzing the conversion of N-acetylglucosamine 1-phosphate into UDP-N-acetylglucosamine, which is a key metabolite in the syntheses of lipopolysaccharide, peptidoglycan, and sialic acids.
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PMID:Identification of the gonococcal glmU gene encoding the enzyme N-acetylglucosamine 1-phosphate uridyltransferase involved in the synthesis of UDP-GlcNAc. 759 84

Human colon cancer is associated with antigenic and structural changes in mucin-type carbohydrate chains (O-glycans). To elucidate the control of the biosynthesis of these O-glycans is colon cancer, we have studied glycosyltransferase and sulphotransferase activities involved in the assembly of elongated O-glycan structures. We analysed homogenates prepared from cancer tissue, adjacent normal and distal normal tissue from 20 patients. Several transferase activities showed pronounced changes in cancer tissue. The changes correlate with previous findings of a loss of O-glycans in cancer mucins, but did not always correlate with levels of Tn, sialyl-Tn, T and Lex antigens in homogenates or with the differentiation status and Duke's stages of the cancer tissue or the patient's blood type, sex and age. UDP-GlcNAc: Gal NAc-R beta 3-N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase (where GlcNAc is N-acetyl-D-glucosamine and GalNAc is N-acetyl-D-galactosamine) synthesizing O-glycan core 3, GlcNAc beta 1-3GalNAc-, CMP-sialic acid: GalNAc-peptide alpha 6-sialyltransferase synthesizing the sialyl-Tn antigen and sulphotransferase activities towards O-glycan core 1, Gal beta 1-3GalNAc-, were found to be decreased in cancer. UDP-GlcNAc: Gal beta 1-3GalNAc beta 6-N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase was also decreased in cancer concomitant with a loss of the ability to synthesize the I antigen and core 4, GlcNAc beta 1-6(GlcNAc beta 1-3) GalNAc-, CMP-sialic acid: Gal beta 1-3GalNAc-R alpha 3-sialyltransferase and GDP-fucose: Gal beta-R alpha 2-fucosyltransferase, synthesizing the blood group H determinant, were found to be 4- and 3- to 8-fold increased, respectively, in cancer compared to normal tissue. The data suggest that the biosynthesis of antigens and mucin-bound O-glycan structures in colon cancer is subject to complex control mechanisms.
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PMID:Alterations of O-glycan biosynthesis in human colon cancer tissues. 773 50


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