“…As already mentioned, the most well‐recognized glycoconjugate studies in invertebrates are the reports on echinoderms in which the glycopolymer in their egg jelly was identified as a fucose‐sulfate polymer (Alves, Mulloy, Moy, Vacquier, & Mourao, ; Mulloy, Ribeiro, Alves, Vieira, & Mourao, ; Vilela‐Silva et al, ) that was shown to possess primary physiological functions in species‐specific gamete interactions and in modulating the AR response (Alves, Mulloy, Diniz, & Mourao, ; Vacquier & Moy, ; Vilela‐Silva, Castro, Valente, Biermann, & Mourao, ). The existence and function of sulfated glycoproteins has been shown in many other invertebrate and vertebrates species (Pomin, ; Sylvester, Morales, Oko, & Griswold, ), but not in some marine shrimp and abalone (Kruevaisayawan et al, ; Kruevaisayawan et al, ). This discrepancy could simply reflect the nature of species’ differences in their glycosylation patterns.…”