Glycoproteins and Glycolipids in Disease Processes - American

we will be discussing compounds that encompass lipids and proteins, in addition to carbohydrates, and their relation to disease processes. It is withi...
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Introduction

Downloaded by PENNSYLVANIA STATE UNIV on June 8, 2012 | http://pubs.acs.org Publication Date: June 1, 1978 | doi: 10.1021/bk-1978-0080.ch001

ROGER W. JEANLOZ Laboratory for Carbohydrate Research, Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA 02114

To some chemist members of the Division of Carbohydrate Chemistry of the American Chemical Society, which is organizing this symposium, it may be unexpected that, for the next few days, we w i l l be discussing compounds that encompass lipids and proteins, in addition to carbohydrates, and their relation to disease processes. It is within the life span of many of us that natural product chemists have realized that nature is not compartmentalized into such nice and clean-cut categories as carbohydrates, proteins, and l i p i d s ; in fact, very few carbohydrates exist that are devoid of a peptide or l i p i d component, as well as there are few proteins devoid of a carbohydrate component. The roles of the carbohydrate component, of glycoproteins and glycolipids that are located at the surface of the animal c e l l or present in the connective tissue that links the c e l l s , have received increased recognition in the past decade and w i l l be discussed during the next few days. The subjects of the f i r s t session of this symposium w i l l be the methods of structure identification presently being developed, as well as the biosynthesis and degradation of glycoproteins and glycolipids. Because glycoproteins and glycolipids of biological interest are generally available only in minute amounts, the methods of structure identification, which w i l l be discussed by Dr. Walborg in his general presentation of current concepts of glycoprotein structure, are being developed at the micro- and even nano-gram l e v e l . Dr. Schachter and associates w i l l entertain us with the very active development of glycoprotein biosynthesis presently taking place. For many years, the concept of glycoprotein and glycolipid biosynthesis was dominated by the concept of elongation of the chains by one carbohydrate unit at a time, through sugar nucleotides; this concept, f i r s t developed for such homoglycans as glycogen and starch, was very ably demonstrated for glycoproteins and glycolipids by Roseman's group. Nearly twenty years ago, this unified concept of chain elongation was shown to be invalid for bacterial polysaccharides, and the importance of isoprenoid 3 © 1978 American Chemical Society In Glycoproteins and Glycolipids in Disease Processes; Walborg, E.; ACS Symposium Series; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, 1978.

4

GLYCOPROTEINS AND GLYCOLIPIDS IN DISEASE PROCESSES

sugar

phosphate

recognized. work

on

sugar have in

the

intermediates

years in

the

D-glucose

etc.

It

with

the

glycoprotein

is

of

of

more

the

than

polysaccharide group,

established

in

the

the

role

role

component

the

passing

of of

transfer interest

processes:

One

^-glycoproteins

and

involves

rather

where

the

carbohydrate

takes

place

through

at

l i p i d

elongation, are

The which

of

their

these

be

to

as

blood-group

simple

components

two

discussed

length

to

few

years

intermediates

the

chain,

are

faced

now

in

animal

and

mechanism,

peptide

backbone

synthesized

degraded

before

where

sugar

the

peptide

complex

coexist

by

Dr.

those

of

only

up

to

surface

result

(for

new

sugar

units

nucleotides.

or

are

Time

merely

of

have

and

the

of

the

a-D-galacto-

chain

has

cells

of

been

glycolipids), chains

of

reported),

during

the

specific

genetic

defects,

a l l

reasons

for

been

his

organisms,

carbohydrate

units

the

and

glycosphingolipids.

example

for

50

Sweeley

eukaryotic

within

(evidence

having

typing,

past

experimentation.

found

the

we

process

from

processes

structures

are

at

the

very

the

active

to

glycoglycerolipids

their

chain

units

its

^-glycoproteins,

oligosaccharides

and p a r t i a l l y

a

be

solely

of

variation or

large

restricted

composition

process

is

single

residues

their

complex

in

w i l l

encompass

of

of

inadequate

diversity

pyranosyl and

as

glycolipids

associates The

second

show w h e t h e r

expression

stage

intermediates

the

transferred

w i l l

of

the

a

is

was

for

isoprenoid

The

that

two

transfer

of

known

these

to

of

synthesis

already

biosynthesis.

of

core

residues

existence

in

L e l o i r ' s

development

biosynthesis

of

ago,

nucleotides,

phosphates

plant

Downloaded by PENNSYLVANIA STATE UNIV on June 8, 2012 | http://pubs.acs.org Publication Date: June 1, 1978 | doi: 10.1021/bk-1978-0080.ch001

sugar

witnessed

role

as

Ten

oncogenic their

active

role

investiga­

tion. Finally, the

most

microgram

specific chains

the

by

ago,

Dr.

of

we

by

were

Maley

Eylar of

D.

not

Dr.

degradation

methods the

identification of

this

his

been

are

we

and to

of

It

able

the the

more

progresses

glycoproteins these

to

my

the

I

laboratory structure such

that

present

addition of established and

structures

of

α -acid an

glycolipids disease

endo-

found

extract

that

biochemical

chemical i n

glyco­

x

of

the

25

exo-

enzyme, in

be

when,

with

lack

such

recently

with

carbohydrate

remember

time

made

off

at

the

and which w i l l

the

was

elucidations

without

s p l i t

linkage

deploring

group,

is

the

in

on

were

his

structure possible

associates.

working

pneumoniae

great

correlation of

subject

was

manipulating.

allowed

chemical

have

that

r e a l i z i n g at

Kobata

has the

not

and

human p l a s m a ,

glycosidase later

recent

carbohydrate-peptide

Dr.

glycosidases protein

the would

endo-glycosidases

near

discussed years

of

level

methods

that

structural

and

made

possible

processes,

Symposium.

RECEIVED August 2, 1978.

In Glycoproteins and Glycolipids in Disease Processes; Walborg, E.; ACS Symposium Series; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, 1978.

the