ABSTRACT
Sialyl-glycopeptides containing an O-glycosidically linked tetrasaccharide chain were obtained from the urine of a patient suffering from mucolipidosis I. Isolation of these compounds was achieved by gel filtration, ion-exchange chromatography and preparative paper chromatography. Their structures were determined by a combination of carbohydrate and amino acid analysis, dansylation, periodate oxidation, methylation studies, enzymatic hydrolysis and 1H-NMR spectroscopy, to be as follows: (formula; see text) wherein R = peptide linked through -Thr-, -Ser-Thr- or -Thr-Ser-. The finding of these glycopeptides in urine shows that mucolipidosis I is characterized by a general "glycoprotein-specific" sialidase deficiency. The possibility of the existence of a human endo-alpha-N-acetylgalactosaminidase is discussed.
Subject(s)
Mucolipidoses/urine , Sialoglycoproteins/urine , Amino Acids/isolation & purification , Chemical Phenomena , Chemistry , Humans , Magnetic Resonance SpectroscopyABSTRACT
Ganglioside fractions were isolated from brains of man, cow, horse, pig, sheep, cat, rabbit, rat, chicken and codfish. The acylneuraminic acid residues, liberated from these gangliosides by treatment with dilute aqueous acid or neuraminidase, were analysed by the thin-layer chromatography and combined gas-liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry. Small amounts (up to 20%) of 9-O-acetyl-N-acetylneuraminic acid, and in bovine and porcine brain gangliosides also traces of N-glycoloylneuraminic acid, were found in addition to N-acetylneuraminic acid.