| Literature DB >> 25893134 |
John S Davis1, T Rajendra Kumar2, Jeffrey V May3, George R Bousfield3.
Abstract
Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25893134 PMCID: PMC4398967 DOI: 10.4172/2153-0637.1000e117
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Glycomics Lipidomics
Figure 1Cystine knot organization and glycosylation of human FSH α- and β-subunits. The cystine (Cys) knot disulfide bonds are indicated as lines. The loops are designated αL1, αL2, αL3, βL1, βL2, and βL3, as indicated. The FSHα seatbelt loop that embraces αL2 of FSHα in the heterodimer is indicated. The locations of the asparagine (Asn) N-glycosylation sites on loops αL2, αL2, and βL1 show diagrammatic representations of a glycan found at each site by glycopeptide mass spectrometry.
Figure 2Human FSH glycoform models. The FSHα (green) and FSHβ (blue) subunits are shown as backbone cartoons. The N-glycans are shown as spheres and represent the most abundant glycans observed in glycopeptide mass spectra [6]. Panel A. hFSH24, which possesses all 4 N-glycans. Panel B. hFSH21, which lacks βAsn24 glycan. Panel C. hFSH18, which lacks βAsn7 glycan. Panel D. hFSH15, which lacks both FSHβ N-glycans. The hFSH24 model was created using Tripos Sybyl and subjected to molecular dynamics. The image in panel A was rendered with PyMol and the FSHβ glycans hidden in subsequent panels.