| Literature DB >> 26047717 |
Simone Kurz1, Kazuhiro Aoki2, Chunsheng Jin3, Niclas G Karlsson3, Michael Tiemeyer2, Iain B H Wilson4, Katharina Paschinger1.
Abstract
Mosquitoes are important vectors of parasitic and viral diseases with Anopheles gambiae transmitting malaria and Aedes aegypti spreading yellow and Dengue fevers. Using two different approaches (solid-phase extraction and reversed-phase or hydrophilic interaction HPLC fractionation followed by MALDI-TOF MS or permethylation followed by NSI-MS), we examined the N-glycans of both A. gambiae and A. aegypti larvae and demonstrate the presence of a range of paucimannosidic glycans as well as bi- and tri-antennary glycans, some of which are modified with fucose or with sulphate or glucuronic acid residues; the latter anionic modifications were also found on N-glycans of larvae from another dipteran species (Drosophila melanogaster). The sulphate groups are attached primarily to core α-mannose residues (especially the α1,6-linked mannose), whereas the glucuronic acid residues are linked to non-reducing β1,3-galactose. Also, O-glycans were found to possess glucuronic acid and sulphate as well as phosphoethanolamine modifications. The presence of sulphated and glucuronylated N-glycans is a novel feature in dipteran glycomes; these structures have the potential to act as additional anionic glycan ligands involved in parasite interactions with the vector host.Entities:
Keywords: Glycans; Glycomics; HPLC; Insects; Mass spectrometric; Oligosaccharides
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26047717 PMCID: PMC4523410 DOI: 10.1016/j.jprot.2015.05.030
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Proteomics ISSN: 1874-3919 Impact factor: 4.044