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N-Glycolylneuraminic
Acid and N-Acetylneuraminic Acid
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Guntar Blix isolated an acidic aminosugar from
sialomucin by acid hydrolysis in a crystallized form and named
it sialic acid. Ernst Klenk also isolated a similar crystallized
aminosugar from brain gangliosides by acid hydrolysis and named
it neuraminic acid. Both acidic aminosugars were identified to
be the same molecule and the correct structure was finally proposed
by Alfred Gottshalk. Over 30 derivatives of neuraminic acids,
N-acetylneuraminic acid (NeuAc) and N-glycolylneuraminic
acid (NeuGc) as the core structures, are found in natural materials
isolated from living organisms. Guntar Blix, Ernst Klenk, and
Alfred Gottshalk reached the agreement that the term sialic acid
be used as the family name covering all derivatives of neuramininic
acid.
Patients treated with sera of horse, sheep, or goat develop antibodies
against heterophile or xenogenic antigens of these animals. Naiki
and colleagues in Japan and Milgrom and colleagues in the U.S.
found one of the xenogenic antigens to be NeuGc containing glycoconjugates.
No report has been published presenting the chemical evidence
for the occurrence of NeuGc in glycolipids and glycoproteins
of normal human tissues. Therefore, our understanding is that
NeuGc is recognized as a foreign material by the immune system
and that anti-NeuGc antibody is produced by the injection of
NeuGc containing glycoconjugates which are quite rich in the
sera of these animals. |
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Schauer and colleagues have conducted an extensive
investigation on the structures, biosynthesis and functions of
the sialic acid family, noting for the first time that NeuGc
is biosynthesized from NeuAc and the rate limiting step responsible
for NeuGc expression is the hydroxylation reaction of CMP-NeuAc.
Kozutsumi in our group found that the hydroxylation of CMP-NeuAc
requires cytochrome b5, and on the basis of this finding
we were able to demonstrate that the hydroxylation reaction is
a complex reaction carried out by NADH, NADH-cytochrome b5
reductase, cytochrome b5, and the terminal enzyme hydroxylase.
Then the hydroxylase was purified from mouse liver cytosol and
its cDNA cloned. Northern blotting with mouse cDNA as a probe
proved that mouse organs except the brain express hydroxylase
mRNA. This suppression in the brain is conserved even in humans
and we believe that the presence of NeuGc in brain glycoconjugates
may not be favorable for brain functions, so there must be a
suppression mechanism specific in the brain.
Unexpectedly we found that humans have a sequence homologous
to mouse cDNA in the genome then cloned a cDNA from a HeLa cell
library. The sequence indicated that human cDNA lacks a 92-bp
fragment which corresponds to mouse exon 5, and a transfection
experiment proved that this cDNA does not produce enzyme activity.
We could not find any parts of the 92-bp sequence in the human
genomic sequence corresponding to mouse introns 4 and 5. Ajit
Varki recently demonstrated that this 92- bp deletion is not
found in the cDNA of chimpanzee hydroxylase, indicating that
the deletion happened after a human ancestor had diverged from
a chimpanzee ancestor.
What changes were produced by the lack of NeuGc expression in
humans? Even today, infection threatens our lives. E. coli
K99 is known to carry a molecule which recognizes NeuGc containing
GM3 and produces severe diarrhea in newborn pigs. Human babies
can escape from this threat. We are also immune to influenza
virus carrying hemagglutinin specific to NeuGc. The suppression
of CMP-NeuAc hydroxylase mRNA in the brain seems to be conserved
among mammals, suggesting an important physiological role for
NeuAc in the brain. The loss of NeuGc expression results in the
loss of expression of more than several tens of carbohydrate
chains of glycoproteins and glycolipids and we do not know what
this means in terms of survival of humans in the past or the
future. |
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Akemi
Suzuki (Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Medical Science) |
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| References |
(1) |
T. Kawano, S. Koyama, H. Takematsu, Y. Kozutsumi, H. Kawasaki,
S. Kawashima, T.Kawasaki, A. Suzuki : Molecular cloning of cytidine
monophospho-N-acetylneuraminic acid hydroxylase. Regulation of
species- and tissue-specific expression of N-glycolylneuraminic
acid. J. Biol. Chem. 270, 16458-16463, 1995 |
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(2) |
A. Irie, S. Koyama, Y. Kozutsumi, T. Kawasaki, A. Suzuki
: The Molecular basis for the absence of N-glycolylneuraminic
acid in humans. J. Biol. Chem. 273, 15866-15871, 1998 |
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(3) |
H.-H. Chou, H. Takematsu, S. Diaz, J. Iber, E. Nickerson,
K L. Wright, E A. Muchmore, D L. Nelson, S T. Warren, A. Varki
: A mutation in human CMP-sialic acid hydroxylase occurred after
the Homo-Pan divergence. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 95, 1171-11756,
1998 |
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| Jun. 15, 1999 |
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