Publication | Open Access
Biosynthesis of lipid-linked oligosaccharides. Isolation and structure of a second lipid-linked oligosaccharide in Chinese hamster ovary cells.
52
Citations
12
References
1979
Year
GlycobiologyMolecular BiologyPolysaccharideViral Structural ProteinVirus StructureBiosynthesisSecond Lipid-linked OligosaccharideMethylation AnalysisGlycosylationBiochemistryVirologyLipidsLipid-linked OligosaccharidesLipid MetabolismLipid-linked OligosaccharideNatural SciencesBiotechnologyOligosaccharide PortionCellular BiochemistryLipid ChemistryMedicineCarbohydrate-protein InteractionLipid Synthesis
Previous work has shown that vesicular stomatitis virus-infected Chinese hamster ovary cells contain a major high molecular weight lipid-linked oligosaccharide which is transferred en bloc to protein during the formation of the asparagine-linked complex-type oligosaccharides of the vesicular stomatitis virus G protein (Tabas, I., Schlesinger, S., and Kornfeld, S. (1978) J. Biol. Chem. 253, 716-722). We now report the characterization of a second, lower molecular weight lipid-linked oligosaccharide. The oligosaccharide portion of this molecule was isolated and its structure was determined by methylation analysis, digestion with exoglycosidases, acetolysis and Smith periodate degradation to be: (formula: see text). Several lines of evidence are presented which indicate that this lipid-linked oligosaccharide is primarily involved in the assembly of the major lipid-linked oligosaccharide rather than in the direct glycosylation of proteins.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1