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Query: UMLS:C0017638 (
glioma
)
30,880
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The ability of Fuc-
GM1
ganglioside to mimic the receptor function of
GM1
for cholera toxin (CT) has been investigated. For this purpose, rat
glioma
C6 cultured cells were enriched with Fuc-
GM1
and the responsiveness to CT was compared with that of cells enriched with
GM1
ganglioside. Fuc-
GM1
was taken up by cells as rapidly and to the same extent as
GM1
. When comparable amounts of ganglioside were associated, the cells enriched with Fuc-
GM1
bound the same amount of 125I-CT as did cells enriched with
GM1
. Under conditions in which
GM1
- and Fuc-
GM1
-enriched cells bound comparable amounts of CT, the Fuc-
GM1
-treated cells accumulated virtually the same amount of cyclic AMP as did
GM1
-treated cells, and activation of adenylate cyclase was also similar. The lag time preceding the CT-induced cAMP accumulation was the same in Fuc-
GM1
- and
GM1
-enriched cells. High-sensitivity isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) experiments showed that the association constants of CT with Fuc-
GM1
or
GM1
ganglioside were comparable (4 x 10(7) M-1 and 1.9 x 10(7) M-1, respectively, at 25 degrees C). Also, the association constants of the B-subunit pentamer with Fuc-
GM1
or
GM1
ganglioside were comparable (about 3 x 10(7) M-1 and 7 x 10(7) M-1, respectively, at 25 degrees C).
...
PMID:Fuc-GM1 ganglioside mimics the receptor function of GM1 for cholera toxin. 131 1
We previously reported that when the oligosaccharide of ganglioside
GM1
is covalently attached to cell surface proteins of
GM1
-deficient rat
glioma
C6 cells, the cells bind large amounts of cholera toxin (CT) but their cAMP response to CT is not enhanced [Pacuszka, T., & Fishman, P. H. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 7673-7668]. We now report that when such cells were exposed to CT in the presence of chloroquine, an acidotropic agent, they accumulated cAMP. This raised the possibility that CT bound to cell surface "neoganglioproteins" may be entering the cells through a different pathway from that of CT-bound
GM1
. To further explore this phenomenon, we covalently attached
GM1
oligosaccharide to human transferrin (Tf). The modified protein (GM1OS-Tf) bound with high affinity to Tf receptors on HeLa cells and increased the binding of CT to the cells. The bound CT, however, was unable to activate adenylyl cyclase as measured by cyclic AMP accumulation. By contrast, treatment of HeLa cells with
GM1
increased both CT binding and stimulation of cyclic AMP accumulation. Control cells and cells treated with either
GM1
or GM1OS-Tf were exposed to CT in the presence of chloroquine. Whereas chloroquine had little or no effect on the response of control or
GM1
-treated cells to CT, it made the cells treated with GM1OS-Tf responsive to the toxin. Our results indicate that CT bound to its natural receptor
GM1
enters the cells through a pathway different from that of toxin bound to neoganglioproteins.
...
PMID:Intoxication of cultured cells by cholera toxin: evidence for different pathways when bound to ganglioside GM1 or neoganglioproteins. 131 9
The ganglioside composition of 15 cases of meningioma, 15 cases of astrocytoma, 5 cases of neurinoma, 4 cases of ependymoma, 3 cases of metastatic brain tumor and 1 case each of mixed
glioma
, oligodendroglioma, medulloblastoma, embryonal carcinoma, and cultured
glioma
cell line were analyzed by thin-layer chromatography. The GM2, GD3, and GD2 content of the tumors was determined using specific monoclonal antibodies (MAb). Cases were grouped according to the difference in ganglioside pattern and various clinical features. In meningiomas and astrocytomas, GM3 and GD3 were the major gangliosides. The tumor content of the rather simple gangliosides (GM3, GM2, GD3, GD2) increased or was almost equal to that of normal tissue (leptomeninges tissue in the case of meningiomas, and brain tissue in the case of astrocytomas), while the tumor content of complex gangliosides (
GM1
, GD1a, GT1a, GT1b) decreased as compared with normal tissue. The GM3 content of meningiomas increased in middle-aged patients, who comprised the majority of the patients with these tumors. The GD2 content decreased in middle-aged patients with initial symptoms of meningioma within a year. The GM3 content of astrocytomas decreased in patients who underwent radiotherapy. The amount of GM3 and GD3 increased in small tumors. GM3 may be related to the early proliferative stage. The ganglioside patterns of brain tumors are shown in this study to differ according to clinical features and also to be changeable in their clinical courses.
...
PMID:Ganglioside composition and its relation to clinical data in brain tumors. 140 35
Biochemical studies have indicated that the structurally simple gangliosides, including GD3 and GM3, are major glycolipid components of
glioma
tissues. In order to clarify the localization of the gangliosides in ethylnitrosourea-induced rat
glioma
, an immunohistochemical study was performed using antibodies against
GM1
, GM3, and GD3. The results obtained in normal fetus, newborn, and adult rat brain, and also in human
glioma
, were compared. In fetal and newborn rat brain, GD3 was present mainly in the neuroepithelial cell surface of the matrix and subependymal layers of the ventricular wall, but GM3 and
GM1
were not detected. In adult rat brain, GD3-positive cells were absent, or present in diminished number, and
GM1
was found chiefly in the neuropil of the cerebral cortex. Most of the rat
glioma
cells were positive for GD3, but not for
GM1
. It was demonstrated that the ganglioside composition of
glioma
cells was similar to that of immature neuroectodermal cells in fetal and newborn rat brain. Furthermore, the number of GD3-positive oligodendroglioma cells increased with tumor growth. In anaplastic gliomas and gross oligodendrogliomas, most tumor cells expressed not only GD3 but also GM3. These results suggest that GD3 is a marker of proliferating neuroectodermal cells, and that activity of the key enzymes in ganglioside synthesis alters with tumor growth and anaplastic change.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical localization of gangliosides in ENU-induced rat glioma. 144 52
Gangliosides shed by tumors enhance tumor formation, possibly by suppressing host antitumor immune function, and gangliosides purified from animal tissues and cultured cells inhibit human cellular immune function in vitro. Determination of immunosuppressive activity of highly purified gangliosides, to uncover structure-activity relationships, is therefore important. Here we have studied a series of gangliosides obtained from human tissue and determined their effects on human natural killer (NK) activity. Total gangliosides from human brain tissue were moderately inhibitory; 100 nmol/ml reduced NK activity of human nonadherent PBMC by 43%. The influence of carbohydrate structure upon inhibitory activity was determined by study of eight highly (HPLC) purified individual gangliosides. Of these, we unexpectedly found that the two minor brain gangliosides with the simplest carbohydrate structures, GM2 and GM3, were very active inhibitors (75 and 47%, respectively, at 50 nmol/ml). In contrast, the structurally more complex major species,
GM1
, GD1a, GD1b, GT1b, and two other minor gangliosides, GD2 and GD3, were inactive. Reduced effector-target binding in a single-cell binding assay by GM2 but not GM3 suggests different mechanisms of inhibition by these two active gangliosides. Since GM2 and GM3 are present in high concentrations in, and are shed by, several common human tumors (e.g., neuroblastoma, melanoma, and
glioma
), their ability to inhibit NK cytotoxicity supports the hypothesis of a role of shed tumor gangliosides in the enhancement of tumor formation.
...
PMID:Immunosuppression by human gangliosides. II. Carbohydrate structure and inhibition of human NK activity. 172 65
Several lines of evidence suggest that gangliosides may play a role in the regulation of growth in many cell types. Here we describe the effects on growth of two different cell lines by the addition of two different chemicals which have been reported to elevate the cellular ganglioside content through different mechanisms. Growth of neuroblastoma (Neuro 2a) cells in medium containing fetal bovine serum was inhibited in a dose-dependent fashion by both exogenous
GM1
ganglioside and NeuAc2en, an inhibitor of sialidase activity. In contrast, growth of
glioma
cells (U-1242 MG) was not affected by exogenous
GM1
or NeuAc2en in the presence of as little as 1% calf serum. However, NeuAc2en inhibited growth of U-1242 MG cells stimulated by platelet-derived growth factor in serum-free medium. These results demonstrate that the growth inhibitory effects of ganglioside on U-1242 MG but not Neuro 2a cells can be counteracted by serum, suggesting that the mechanisms through which gangliosides affect cell growth may be different for different growth factors and cell types.
...
PMID:Effects of GM1 and 2-deoxy-2,3-dehydro-N-acetylneuraminic acid (NeuAc2en) on neuroblastoma (Neuro 2a) and human glioma cells (U1242 MG). 182 41
We synthesized several lipid analogues of ganglioside
GM1
by attaching its oligosaccharide moiety (GM1OS) to aminophospholipids, aliphatic amines, and cholesteryl hemisuccinate. We incubated
GM1
-deficient rat
glioma
C6 cells with each of the derivatives as well as native
GM1
and assayed the cells for their ability to bind and respond to cholera toxin. On the basis of the observed increase in binding of 125I-labeled cholera toxin, it was apparent that the cells took up and initially incorporated most of the derivatives into the plasma membrane. In the case of the aliphatic amine derivatives, the ability to generate new toxin binding sites was dependent on chain length; whereas the C10 derivative was ineffective, C12 and higher analogues were effective. Increased binding was dependent on both the concentration of the neoglycolipid in the medium and the time of exposure. Cells pretreated with the various derivatives accumulated cyclic AMP in response to cholera toxin, but there were differences in their effectiveness. The cholesterol and long-chain aliphatic amine derivatives were more effective than native
GM1
, whereas the phospholipid derivatives were less effective. The distance between GM1OS and the phospholipid also appeared to influence its functional activity. The neoglycolipid formed by cross-linking the amine of GM1OS to phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) with disuccinimidyl suberate was less effective than the neoglycolipid formed by directly attaching GM1OS to PE by reductive amination. Furthermore, insertion of a C8 spacer in the former neoglycolipid rendered it even less effective.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Neoglycolipid analogues of ganglioside GM1 as functional receptors of cholera toxin. 184 91
Tritium-labeled neoglycolipids consisting of the oligosaccharide of ganglioside
GM1
attached to cholesterol (GM1OSNH-X-CHOL), phosphatidylethanolamine (GM1OS-PE) and stearylamine (GM1OSNHC18) were synthesized and their uptake and metabolism by
GM1
-deficient rat
glioma
C6 cells were determined. When the neoglycolipids were added to serum-free culture medium, all three were rapidly taken up by the cells and initially inserted into the plasma membrane based on their resistance to trypsin and their ability to bind cholera toxin. With time, the neoglycolipids underwent internalization as the ratio of cell-associated radioactivity to cell surface toxin binding increased; this process was slow for GM1OSNH-X-CHOL and GM1OS-PE and rapid for GM1OSNHC18. Analysis of lipids extracted from the cells indicated that the neoglycolipids also underwent metabolism to GD1aOS-based analogues. In addition, GM1OSNH-X-CHOL and GM1OSNHC18 were degraded to their GM2OS-based analogues, whereas GM2OS-PE was not detected. In contrast, large amounts of 3H were recovered in the medium from cells treated with GM1OS-PE and the label was associated with material that behaved neither as an oligosaccharide or a neoglycolipid. In the presence of monensin or chloroquine, metabolism of the three neoglycolipids was inhibited. Thus, GM1OS-based neoglycolipids were taken up by the cells, internalized and sorted both to the Golgi apparatus (sialylated to GD1aOS-based analogues) and to lysosomes (hydrolyzed to GM2OS-based analogues). The rate and extent of these processes, however, were strongly influenced by the nature of lipid moiety.
...
PMID:Metabolism of cholesterol, phosphatidylethanolamine and stearylamine analogues of GM1 ganglioside by rat glioma C6 cells. 203 49
The use of the B subunit of cholera toxin, a protein that binds specifically to ganglioside
GM1
, has provided a new paradigm for studying physiological functions of ganglioside
GM1
. The B subunit inhibited the growth of rat
glioma
C6 cells that had been pretreated with ganglioside
GM1
. In some preparations of the B subunit, the inhibition was independent of adenylate cyclase activation and was due to the binding of the B subunit to ganglioside
GM1
inserted onto the cell surface. However, in other preparations of the B subunit, there was an additional inhibitory effect due to small contaminations with the A subunit, which caused increases in intracellular cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) levels and concomitant growth inhibition. This vanishingly small contamination with the A subunit could not be detected by conventional protein sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) analysis but could be measured utilizing a sensitive adenylate cyclase activation assay. Thus caution must be used to ensure that any biological effects of the B subunit are not due to contaminating A subunit and are due solely to the binding of the B subunit to ganglioside
GM1
exposed on the cell surface. This is especially important in cyclic nucleotide-sensitive systems.
...
PMID:Cautionary note on the use of the B subunit of cholera toxin as a ganglioside GM1 probe: detection of cholera toxin A subunit in B subunit preparations by a sensitive adenylate cyclase assay. 215 74
GM1
(II3Neu5Ac-GgOse4Cer)-oligosaccharide was prepared from the ganglioside by ozonolysis and alkaline fragmentation, reductively aminated and coupled to the heterobifunctional cross-linker succinimidyl 4-(N-maleimidomethyl) cyclohexane-1-carboxylate. The resulting derivative reacted with free sulfhydryl groups and readily cross-linked to cell surface components on rat
glioma
C6 cells which are
GM1
-deficient. Attachment of the
GM1
-oligosaccharide derivative, which was monitored by increased binding of 125I-cholera toxin to the cells, was both time- and concentration-dependent. Prior treatment of the cells with dithiothreitol enhanced the attachment by generating additional free sulfhydryl groups. The affinity of cholera toxin for cells treated with the
GM1
-oligosaccharide derivative or with
GM1
was similar. The nature of the newly generated toxin receptors was determined by Western blotting. Membranes from derivatized cells were separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and the resolved components were electrophoretically transferred to a nitrocellulose sheet which was overlain with 125I-cholera toxin. The toxin bound to a wide variety of membrane proteins, most of which were trypsin-sensitive. No such binding was observed using membranes from control cells. Although the
GM1
-neoganglioproteins newly generated on the surface of rat
glioma
C6 cells readily bound cholera toxin, the cells did not become more responsive to the toxin as measured by increased production of cyclic AMP or activation of adenylate cyclase. In contrast, cells exposed to
GM1
became highly responsive to the toxin. Thus, neoganglioproteins on the cell surface appear to behave as nonfunctional receptors for cholera toxin.
...
PMID:Generation of cell surface neoganglioproteins. GM1-neoganglioproteins are non-functional receptors for cholera toxin. 215 9
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