Background-We established an efficient preparation method to obtain endothelial-like cells (ECs) from human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) and tested whether these hESC-ECs would show therapeutic potential for treatment of hindlimb ischemia. Methods and Results-ECs differentiated from hESCs were obtained by mechanical isolation and cell sorting for von Willebrand factor. The isolated hESC-ECs maintained endothelial cell-specific characteristics such as endothelial marker expression and capillary formation. One day after surgical induction of hindlimb ischemia in athymic mice, hESC-ECs were injected intramuscularly into ischemic limbs. Four weeks after treatment, hESC-EC treatment significantly increased limb salvage (36%) compared with treatment with medium (0%). In addition, laser Doppler imaging showed that the ratio of blood perfusion (ischemic to normal limb) was increased significantly (PϽ0.01) by hESC-EC treatment (0.511Ϯ0.167) compared with medium injection (0.073Ϯ0.061). Capillary and arteriole densities were 658Ϯ190/mm 2 and 30Ϯ11/mm 2 in the hESC-EC group, respectively, whereas those in the medium group were 392Ϯ118/mm 2 and 16Ϯ8/mm
The main extracellular matrix binding component of the dystrophin-glycoprotein complex, ␣-dystroglycan (␣-DG), which was originally isolated from rabbit skeletal muscle, is an extensively O-glycosylated protein. Previous studies have shown ␣-DG to be modified by both O-GalNAc-and O-mannose-initiated glycan structures. O-Mannosylation, which accounts for up to 30% of the reported O-linked structures in certain tissues, has been rarely observed on mammalian proteins. Mutations in multiple genes encoding defined or putative glycosyltransferases involved in O-mannosylation are causal for various forms of congenital muscular dystrophy. Here, we explore the glycosylation of purified rabbit skeletal muscle ␣-DG in detail. Using tandem mass spectrometry approaches, we identify 4 O-mannose-initiated and 17 O-GalNAc-initiated structures on ␣-DG isolated from rabbit skeletal muscle. Additionally, we demonstrate the use of tandem mass spectrometry-based workflows to directly analyze glycopeptides generated from the purified protein. By combining glycomics and tandem mass spectrometry analysis of 91 glycopeptides from ␣-DG, we were able to assign 21 different residues as being modified by O-glycosylation with differing degrees of microheterogeneity; 9 sites of O-mannosylation and 14 sites of O-GalNAcylation were observed with only two sites definitively exhibiting occupancy by either type of glycan. The distribution of identified sites of O-mannosylation suggests a limited role for local primary sequence in dictating sites of attachment.Defects in protein glycosylation related to human disease were first reported in the 1980s, and since then, about 40 various types of congenital disorders of glycosylation have been reported (1). The term congenital disorders of glycosylation was first used to describe alterations of the N-glycosylation pathway and was later expanded to include the O-glycosylation pathways (1-3). The importance and complexity of O-linked glycosylation have only recently begun to be appreciated (1, 3, 4). In particular, mutations in genes encoding (putative) glycosyltransferases, which catalyze the addition and extension of O-linked mannose-initiated glycans, have garnered increased attention in the last decade given that they are causative for several forms of congenital muscular dystrophy (5, 6).The most common forms of O-glycosylation on secretory proteins are the mucin-like O-GalNAc structures that are initiated by polypeptide N-␣-acetylgalactosaminyltransferases in the endoplasmic reticulum-Golgi intermediate compartment and/or early cis-Golgi (7). Additionally, other O-linked structures are initiated with alternative monosaccharides, such as O-mannose, O-glucose, O-fucose, O-xylose, and O-GlcNAc onSer/Thr residues and the O-galactose modification of hydroxylysine residues in collagen domains (4). The diversity of O-mannosylated proteins in mammals, although quite abundant in some tissues (ϳ30% of O-glycans released from mouse brains (8)), has not been well characterized. The only clearly identified mamma...
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