Adult male rats were injected intraventricularly with N-[3H]acetylmannosamine. After different time intervals the rats were killed and free sialic acid, CMP-sialic acid, lipid- and protein-bound sialic acid were isolated from brain and the specific radioactivities determined. Maximal specific radioactivity was reached after approximately 4 h for CMP-sialic acid, after 10-12 h for free sialic acid and after approximately 42 h for lipid- and protein-bound sialic acid. After some days the specific radioactivities of all four pools were the same and decreased equally, with a calculated turnover rate of approximately 3.5 weeks. The conclusion was that this phenomenon was the result of reutilisation of sialic acid and/or precursors. Therefore, the calculated turnover is not the turnover of bound sialic acid, but merely the rate of leakage of sialic acid and/or precursors out of the brain, so that no real turnover can be measured by this method. The first few hours after injection the specific radioactivity of CMP-sialic acid rose above that of free sialic acid. It is supposed that a compartmentalization exists of free sialic acid. The newly synthesised sialic acid molecules are not secreted into the cytoplasmic pool but are preferentially used for the synthesis of CMP-sialic acid. The results and conclusions are discussed in view of the general problems concerning turnover measurements of glycoconjugates.
Abstract— Sialoglycoproteins and gangliosides were characterized in various bovine brain regions by determining the amount of sialic acid. Expressed per g dry weight, the gangliosidic sialic acid ranged from 11·20 to 1·93 μmol and the glycoprotein sialic acid from 8·93 to 1·84 μmol in grey and white matter respectively (values not corrected for incomplete release and breakdown during hydrolysis). Both the sialoglycoproteins and the gangliosides occur in highest concentration in areas predominating in neuronal cell bodies (cerebral grey, cerebellar grey, caudate nucleus). The lowest concentrations are found in those areas, consisting largely of myelinated fibre tracts and glial cells (pons, medulla, corpus callosum, cerebral white). Relative to the gangliosides the sialoglycoproteins are somewhat more concentrated in white matter. The sialidase activity was investigated with endogenous substrate as well as with additional gangliosides or sialoglycopeptides. In all conditions the activity was much greater in grey matter than in white matter. The regional sialidase distribution more or less parallels the distribution of sialic acid in the various regions. At high substrate level the sialoglycopeptides inhibit the sialidase activity. There are indications that gangliosides are a far better substrate for brain sialidase than glycoproteins or glycopeptides. The possible significance of this phenomenon is discussed.
In agreement with other investigators it has been shown that endogenous as well as added gangliosides are a substrate for brain sialidase. The release of sialic acid was enhanced in the presence of Triton X-100; this might be due to the action of the detergent on the ganglioside micelles. The sialic acid release from endogenous gangliosides was observed over 48 h and compared with the effect of the sialidase on the endogenous glycoproteins. Though the hydrolysis of sialic acid from gangliosides is much faster in the first hours, after 48 h 40 per cent of the total bound sialic was released from both substrates at pH 4.0 and 37°C.Sialoglycopeptides obtained from brain glycoproteins are also metabolized by the sialidase. No effect of Triton X-100 on this substrate has been observed. From sialoglycopeptides, fractions can be obtained by DEAE-Sephadex A-50 column chromatography with a sialic acid content from 8 to 26 per cent. The fractions with a high sialic acid content were about equally active towards brain sialidase as gangliosides. The results agree with the similar turnover rate observed for the carbohydrate chains from gangliosides and glycoproteins, but are in contrast to the observations of other investigators who have stated that glycoproteins are a poor substrate for brain sialidase. In our experiments bovine and ovine submaxillary mucins and sialyl-lactoses showed only slight activity compared to gangliosides and selected brain sialoglycopeptides.Abbreviations used: O.S.M., ovine submaxillary mucin; B.S.M., bovine submaxillary mucin; ganglioside nomenclature, GM1, GDla, GDlb, GTl, according to SVENNERHOLM (1963).
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