RESUMO
The sulfated polysaccharides that occur in the tunic of ascidians differ markedly in molecular weight and chemical composition. A high molecular weight fraction (F-1), which has a high galactose content and a strong negative optical rotation, is present in all species. Several structural differences were observed among the F-1 fractions obtained from three species of ascidians that were studied in detail. Large numbers of alpha-L-galactopyranose residues sulfated at position 3 and linked glycosidically through position 1----4 are present in F-1 from all three ascidians. However, alpha-L-galactopyranose units, 1----3-linked and partially sulfated at position 4, comprise about half of the sugar units in the central core of F-1 from Ascidian nigra. In addition, L-galactopyranose nonreducing end units occur in F-1 from Styela plicata and A. nigra, but comprise only a minor fraction of F-1 from Clavelina sp. The combination of these various component units gives a complex structure for F-1 from S. plicata and A. nigra, whereas F-1 from Clavelina sp. possesses a simpler structure. The structures of these ascidian glycans are unique among all previously described sulfated polysaccharides, since they are highly branched (except that from Clavelina sp), sulfated at position 3, and contain large amounts of L-galactose without its D-enantiomorph. These data show unusual examples of polyanionic glycans with structural function in animal tissues.
Assuntos
Galactanos/isolamento & purificação , Urocordados/análise , Animais , Carboidratos/análise , Cromatografia DEAE-Celulose , Cromatografia em Gel , Cromatografia por Troca Iônica , Especificidade da EspécieAssuntos
Ácidos Carboxílicos/urina , Doenças em Gêmeos , Hipoglicemia/complicações , Síndrome de Reye/complicações , Cromatografia Gasosa , Diarreia/complicações , Diarreia/urina , Humanos , Hipoglicemia/urina , Lactente , Insulina/sangue , Masculino , Síndrome de Reye/urina , Vômito/complicações , Vômito/urinaRESUMO
Twin male infant siblings who presented in Harrow, UK, with a Reye's-like syndrome associated with profound hypoglycaemia, vomiting, diarrhoea, coma and death in one child, with dicarboxylic aciduria, and similarities to Jamacian vomiting sickness (hypoglycin toxicity) have been shown to excrete large amounts of a previously unrecorded urinary organic acid. This has been identified as 5-hydroxyhexanoic acid by gas chromatography mass spectrometry using a synthesized standard. Concentrations observed were 340 and 330 mg g-1 creatinine in the two patients. The metabolic precursor of the urinary acid is suggested to be hex-4-enoic acid, a probable chemical toxin closely related to the active organic acid metabolite of hypoglycin. The possibility of omega - 1 oxidation of hexanoic acid to 5-hydroxyhexanoic acid in these and other patients with dicarbocylic aciduris is also discussed.