Publication | Open Access
Modification of cell surface glycoprotein: addition of fucosyl residues during epidermal differentiation.
111
Citations
33
References
1982
Year
GlycobiologyCytoskeletonDermatologyCellular PhysiologyDifferentiated CellsExperimental DermatologyMatrix BiologyGlycosylationUea BindingFucosyl ResiduesAllergyCutaneous BiologyNewborn RatEpidermal DifferentiationCell BiologyCell Surface GlycoproteinSignal TransductionCellular BiochemistryMedicineDermal StructureExtracellular Matrix
When cutaneous sections from the newborn rat were treated with alpha-fucosidase, Ulex europeus agglutinin I (UEA) binding to the cell surface of the differentiated cells in the epidermis was diminished and there was an appearance in these cell layers of binding by Bandeiraea simplicifolia I-B4 lectin (BS I-B4), which normally is specific for the basal cells. A similar treatment with alpha-galactosidase resulted in a loss of BS I-B4 binding, but had no effect on UEA binding. Glycoproteins isolated from the membranes of epidermal cells showed a threefold increase in the ratio of binding to UEA versus BS I-B4 affinity columns as the proteins were derived from the more differentiated cell populations. These data suggest that alpha-fucosyl residues are added to the glycoproteins on the cell surfaces of differentiated cells, thus blocking alpha-galactosyl residues and changing the lectin binding specificity as epidermal cells move out of the basal cell layer.
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