Search results for "Glycolipid"

showing 10 items of 38 documents

Expression of epithelial antigens EPM-1 and EXO-1 in normal, transitional, inflammatory and neoplastic colorectal mucosa

1993

EPM-1 (a high molecular weight glycoprotein) and EXO-1 (a carbohydrate epitope expressed on polar neutral glycolipids and mucins) are two developmental antigens of normal and neoplastic human epithelia and were characterised by monoclonal antibodies. Their distribution was investigated in normal and pathological human colorectal mucosa. In normal mucosa, EPM-1 and EXO-1 showed characteristic expression patterns. EPM-1 was differentially expressed along the crypt villus axis with maximum at the crypt basis. EXO-1 was present throughout the whole mucosa. The characteristic gradient of EPM-1 expression along the crypt axis in normal mucosa was no longer detectable in benign polyps. Intact grad…

Cancer ResearchPathologymedicine.medical_specialtyColonmedicine.drug_classCryptBiologyMonoclonal antibodyEpitopeGlycolipidCrohn DiseaseAntigenAntigens Neoplasmparasitic diseasesmedicineHumansIntestinal Mucosachemistry.chemical_classificationMembrane GlycoproteinsMucinRectumIntestinal PolypsImmunohistochemistryStainingOncologychemistryAntigens SurfaceColitis UlcerativeColorectal NeoplasmsGlycoproteinEuropean Journal of Cancer
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Apprehending ganglioside diversity: a comprehensive methodological approach

2015

Gangliosides make a wide family of glycosphingolipids ubiquitously expressed in mammalian tissues and particularly abundant in the brain and nervous system. They exhibit a huge diversity due to structural variations in both their oligosaccharidic chain and ceramide moiety, which represent a real analytical challenge. Since their discovery in the 1940s, methods have persistently improved until the emergence of Liquid Chromatography/Mass Spectrometry (LC/MS) which offers a high level of specificity and sensitivity and is suitable with high-throughput profiling studies. We describe here a comprehensive approach relying on various techniques and aiming at fully characterizing gangliosides in bi…

CeramideSpectrometry Mass Electrospray IonizationretinaglycolipidsOrganes des sensmolecular species[ SDV.AEN ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Food and NutritionAbsolute quantificationSensory OrgansRat retinaQD415-436BiologyBiochemistryNervous Systemchemistry.chemical_compoundEndocrinologyGangliosidesLipidomicsMethodsFood and NutritionAnimalsliquid chromatographylc/ms[SDV.MHEP.OS]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathology/Sensory Organsmass spectrometryBrain ChemistryGangliosideceramides;glycolipids;glycosphingolipids;lc/ms;lipidomics;liquid chromatography;mass spectrometry;molecular species;retina;sphingolipidssphingolipidsceramidesglycosphingolipidsAssayChromatography liquidBrainCell BiologySphingolipidRatschemistryBiochemistry[ SDV.MHEP.OS ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathology/Sensory OrgansAlimentation et Nutritionlipidomics[SDV.AEN]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Food and NutritionChromatography Liquid
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IM30 triggers membrane fusion in cyanobacteria and chloroplasts

2015

The thylakoid membrane of chloroplasts and cyanobacteria is a unique internal membrane system harbouring the complexes of the photosynthetic electron transfer chain. Despite their apparent importance, little is known about the biogenesis and maintenance of thylakoid membranes. Although membrane fusion events are essential for the formation of thylakoid membranes, proteins involved in membrane fusion have yet to be identified in photosynthetic cells or organelles. Here we show that IM30, a conserved chloroplast and cyanobacterial protein of approximately 30 kDa binds as an oligomeric ring in a well-defined geometry specifically to membranes containing anionic lipids. Triggered by Mg2+, membr…

ChloroplastsGeneral Physics and AstronomyBiologyMembrane FusionThylakoidsGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyBacterial ProteinsCentrifugation Density GradientIntegral membrane proteinMultidisciplinaryGalactolipidsPeripheral membrane proteinSynechocystisLipid bilayer fusionfood and beveragesPhosphatidylglycerolsGeneral ChemistryTransmembrane proteinCell biologyChloroplastMembraneThylakoidLiposomesQuantasomeGlycolipidsProtein BindingNature Communications
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Determination of sialic acid and gangliosides in biological samples and dairy products: A review

2009

Gangliosides are sphingolipids containing one or more moieties of sialic acid in their structure. Both gangliosides and sialic acid are bioactive compounds related to animal physiology. Due to their biological relevance, analytical methods adapted to each type of matrix have been developed over time. The present study reviews the main methods applied to the analysis of sialic acid and gangliosides in biological samples and dairy products.

ChromatographyGangliosideChromatographySpectrum AnalysisClinical BiochemistryPharmaceutical ScienceSphingolipidN-Acetylneuraminic AcidAnalytical ChemistrySialic acidcarbohydrates (lipids)chemistry.chemical_compoundGlycolipidBiochemistrychemistryMilk productsGangliosidesDrug DiscoveryAnimalsDairy ProductsQuantitative analysis (chemistry)SpectroscopyJournal of Pharmaceutical and Biomedical Analysis
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Evidence that clustered phosphocholine head groups serve as sites for binding and assembly of an oligomeric protein pore.

2006

High susceptibility of rabbit erythrocytes toward the pore-forming action of staphylococcal alpha-toxin correlates with the presence of saturable, high affinity binding sites. All efforts to identify a protein or glycolipid receptor have failed, and the fact that liposomes composed solely of phosphatidylcholine are efficiently permeabilized adds to the enigma. A novel concept is advanced here to explain the puzzle. We propose that low affinity binding moieties can assume the role of high affinity binding sites due to their spatial arrangement in the membrane. Evidence is presented that phosphocholine head groups of sphingomyelin, clustered in sphingomyelin-cholesterol microdomains, serve th…

ErythrocytesPhosphorylcholineBacterial ToxinsBiologyBiochemistryCell Linechemistry.chemical_compoundHemolysin ProteinsGlycolipidMembrane MicrodomainsPhosphatidylcholineAnimalsHumansReceptorProtein Structure QuaternaryMolecular BiologyPhosphocholineLiposomeBinding SitesCell BiologySphingomyelinsMembraneCholesterolSphingomyelin PhosphodiesteraseBiochemistrychemistryLiposomesRabbitsSphingomyelinFunction (biology)Protein BindingThe Journal of biological chemistry
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Contact-dependent inhibition of growth of normal diploid human fibroblasts by plasma membrane glycoproteins.

1988

Homeostasis in vivo is maintained by a highly complex network of positive and negative signals. At the cellular level, this regulatory microenvironment can be divided, in a simplified fashion, into two major compartments: the humoral compartment, including compounds such as hormones, growth factors and nutrients, and the contact-environment compartment, including cell-cell and cell-matrix interactions. At least in cultures of diploid, non-transformed cells, cell-cell and cell-matrix interactions have been shown to be of major importance for the regulation of growth as well as of differentiation. Although until now the glycoprotein involved in the contact-dependent inhibition of growth has n…

GlycanCell CommunicationPlatelet Membrane GlycoproteinsBiochemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundmedicineCompartment (development)AnimalsHumansReceptors ImmunologicFibroblastReceptorCells Culturedchemistry.chemical_classificationMembrane GlycoproteinsbiologyContact InhibitionCell MembraneAntibodies MonoclonalBiological activityGeneral MedicineFibroblastsMembrane glycoproteinsmedicine.anatomical_structureCell Transformation NeoplasticchemistryBiochemistryPlatelet Glycoprotein GPIb-IX Complexbiology.proteinGrowth inhibitionGlycolipidsGlycoproteinCell DivisionBiochimie
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Immobilized glycolipids from human diploid fibroblasts inhibit DNA synthesis of cultured human fibroblasts*1

1987

Several previous studies have shown that glycolipids isolated from plasma membranes of cultured cells and added to cells in culture inhibit the growth rate in a concentration-dependent fashion. In order to investigate the possible involvement of glycolipids in the growth regulation of normal cells by cell-cell contacts, we tested the effect of immobilized glycolipids, isolated from human fibroblasts, on the DNA synthesis of freshly seeded fibroblasts. Gangliosides inhibited DNA synthesis to a great extent, whereas neutral glycolipids had only a minor effect. The degree of inhibition of DNA synthesis by immobilized gangliosides depended both on the cell density of the cultures from which the…

Growth regulationDNA synthesisStimulationCell BiologyBiologyMolecular biologyHuman lungmedicine.anatomical_structureMembraneGlycolipidBiochemistryCell densitymedicinePloidyExperimental Cell Research
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Topical Application of Glycolipids from Isochrysis galbana Prevents Epidermal Hyperplasia in Mice

2017

Chronic inflammatory skin diseases such as psoriasis have a significant impact on society. Currently, the major topical treatments have many side effects, making their continued use in patients difficult. Microalgae have emerged as a source of bio-active molecules such as glycolipids with potent anti-inflammatory properties. We aimed to investigate the effects of a glycolipid (MGMG-A) and a glycolipid fraction (MGDG) obtained from the microalga Isochrysis galbana on a TPA-induced epidermal hyperplasia murine model. In a first set of experiments, we examined the preventive effects of MGMG-A and MGDG dissolved in acetone on TPA-induced hyperplasia model in mice. In a second step, we performed…

Keratinocytes0301 basic medicineglycolipidsAdministration Topicalmedicine.medical_treatmentPharmaceutical SciencePharmacologyIsochrysis galbanaOintmentsMGDGMiceDrug DiscoveryMicroalgaelcsh:QH301-705.5Pharmacology Toxicology and Pharmaceutics (miscellaneous)Skinintegumentary systembiologyChemistrymicroalgaeHaptophytaHyperplasiaepidermal hyperplasiaCytokineIsochrysis galbanaCytokinesTetradecanoylphorbol AcetateFemalemedicine.drugskinglycolipids; <b>MGDG</b>; skin; inflammation; epidermal hyperplasia; microalgae; <i>Isochrysis galbana</i>Cell SurvivalDrug CompoundingSkin AbsorptionSkin DiseasesArticle03 medical and health sciencesGlycolipidIn vivoPsoriasismedicineAnimalsHumansDexamethasoneInflammationHyperplasiamedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationEpidermal hyperplasia030104 developmental biologylcsh:Biology (General)inflammationGlycolipidsEx vivoMarine Drugs
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Phenolic-glycolipid-1 and lipoarabinomannan preferentially modulate TCR- and CD28-triggered proximal biochemical events, leading to T-cell unresponsi…

2012

Abstract Background Advanced stages of leprosy show T cell unresponsiveness and lipids of mycobacterial origin are speculated to modulate immune responses in these patients. Present study elucidates the role of phenolicglycolipid (PGL-1) and Mannose-capped lipoarabinomannan (Man-LAM) on TCR- and TCR/CD28- mediated signalling. Results We observed that lipid antigens significantly inhibit proximal early signalling events like Zap-70 phosphorylation and calcium mobilization. Interestingly, these antigens preferentially curtailed TCR-triggered early downstream signalling events like p38 phosphorylation whereas potentiated that of Erk1/2. Further, at later stages inhibition of NFAT binding, IL-2…

LipopolysaccharidesEndocrinology Diabetes and MetabolismT-LymphocytesClinical BiochemistryPGL-1Man-LAMGene ExpressionLymphocyte ActivationJurkat cellsJurkat CellsEndocrinologyT-cell activationIL-2 receptorPhosphorylationExtracellular Signal-Regulated MAP KinasesPromoter Regions Geneticlcsh:RC620-627Protein Kinase CImmunity CellularZAP-70 Protein-Tyrosine KinaseCD28hemic and immune systemsCell biologyMycobacterium lepraelcsh:Nutritional diseases. Deficiency diseasesmedicine.anatomical_structureHost-Pathogen InteractionsProtein BindingMAP Kinase Signaling SystemT cellReceptors Antigen T-Cellchemical and pharmacologic phenomenaBiologyImmune systemCD28 AntigensLeprosymedicineHumansSecretionCalcium SignalingCell ProliferationBiochemistry medicalAntigens BacterialLipoarabinomannanNFATC Transcription FactorsResearchBiochemistry (medical)T-cell receptorInterleukin-2 Receptor alpha SubunitMycobacteriaGene Expression RegulationAnergyImmunologyLeukocytes MononuclearInterleukin-2GlycolipidsLipids in Health and Disease
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Terpioside B, a difucosyl GSL from the marine sponge Terpios sp. is a potent inhibitor of NO release.

2010

Terpioside B (2a), a unique glycolipid containing two fucose residues in the furanose form in its pentasaccharide chain, was isolated from the marine sponge Terpios sp. Its complete stereostructure was solved by interpretation of mass spectrometric and NMR data along with CD and GG-MS analyses of its degradation products. Terpioside B is a potent inhibitor against LPS-induced NO release, and is considerably more active than simpler glycosphingolipids such as terpioside A and monoglucosylceramide.

LipopolysaccharidesTerpiosStereochemistryClinical BiochemistryMolecular ConformationPharmaceutical ScienceNitric Oxide01 natural sciencesBiochemistryFucoseCell Line03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundGlycolipidDrug DiscoveryAnimalsMolecular Biology030304 developmental biologychemistry.chemical_classification0303 health sciencesbiology010405 organic chemistryChemistryMacrophagesOrganic ChemistryAbsolute configurationGlycosphingolipidOligosaccharideMacrophage Activationbiology.organism_classificationFuranose0104 chemical sciencesPoriferaSpongeBiochemistryMolecular MedicineGlycolipidsBioorganicmedicinal chemistry
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