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  • Structural characterization of the disialogangliosides of murine peritoneal macrophages.

Structural characterization of the disialogangliosides of murine peritoneal macrophages.

Glycobiology (1998-02-10)
H C Yohe, S Ye, B B Reinhold, V N Reinhold
ABSTRACT

Sialoglycosphingolipids (gangliosides) have been increasingly implicated as regulators of membrane signaling events. Macrophage ganglioside patterns dramatically increase in complexity when murine peritoneal macrophages are stimulated in vivo with the appearance of the sialidase-sensitive monosialoganglioside GM1b (cisGM1) as a major component. Gangliosides from stimulated murine peritoneal macrophages were separated into monosialo and polysialo fractions and the polysialo fraction structurally characterized by enzymatic, chemical, and mass spectra methods. All detectable components of the polysialo fraction were determined to be disialogangliosides. Treatment of the polysialo fraction with Clostridium perfringens sialidase produced mostly the sialidase-resistant monosialoganglioside, GM1a, and a minor amount of asialoGM1. Periodate oxidation and mass spectrometry analyses demonstrated the lack of tandem disialo moieties which indicated the absence of GD1b or GD1c (GD1) entities. The combined data showed the major disialogangliosides consisted of GD1a entities comprising IV3-NeuAc,II3NeuAc-GgOse4Cer, IV3-NeuGc,II3NeuAc-GgOse4Cer, IV3NeuAc,II3NeuGc-GgOse4Cer, and IV3-NeuGc,II3NeuGc-GgOse4Cer. Minor components consisted of GD1alpha entities, IV3NeuAc, III6NeuAcGgOse4Cer, IV3NeuGc, III6NeuGc-GgOse4Cer, and also positional isomer(s) of GD1alpha(NeuAc, NeuGc). These isomeric components were identified by collision analysis and tandem mass spectrometry. Consistent with previous analyses, the ceramide portion of all polysialo (disialo) gangliosides contained solely C18 sphingosine with C16 and C24 fatty acid moieties. These results, combined with the previous characterization of macrophage monosialogangliosides, indicate normal murine macrophage ganglioside biosynthesis proceeds along the "a" ganglioside pathway, e.g., GM3-->GM2-->GM1a-->GD1a, and the proposed asialoganglioside or "alpha" pathway, asialoGM1-->GM1b-->GD1alpha. The presence of totally sialidase-sensitive gangliosides appears to be characteristic of functional murine peritoneal macrophages while they are reduced in genetically impaired cells.