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  • Title: Does an animal peptide: N-glycanase have the dual role as an enzyme and a carbohydrate-binding protein?
    Author: Suzuki T, Kitajima K, Inoue S, Inoue Y.
    Journal: Glycoconj J; 1994 Oct; 11(5):469-76. PubMed ID: 7535137.
    Abstract:
    Recently, we have reported purification and characterization of a de-N-glycosylating enzyme, peptide: N-glycanase (PNGase) found in C3H mouse fibroblast L-929 cells, and designated L-929 PNGase [Suzuki T, Seko A, Kitajima K, Inoue Y, Inoue S (1994) J Biol Chem 269, 17611-18]. The unique properties of L-929 PNGase are that the enzyme had a high affinity to the substrate glycopeptide (e.g. Km = 114 microM for fetuin derived glycopentapeptide) and that the PNGase-catalysed reaction is strongly inhibited by the released free oligosaccharides but not by the free peptides formed, suggesting that L-929 PNGase is able to bind to a certain type of carbohydrate chain. In this study, we report the new findings of the mannan-binding property of L-929 PNGase: the de-N-glycosylating enzyme activity of L-929 PNGase was inhibited by yeast mannan and triomannose, Man alpha 1-->3(Man alpha 1-->6)Man, but not by mannose and alpha-methyl-D-mannoside. Furthermore, L-929 PNGase was revealed to bind to the glycan moiety of yeast mannan by using mannan-conjugated Sepharose 4B gel as a ligand, suggesting that L-929 PNGase could serve not only as an enzyme but also as a carbohydrate recognition protein in vivo. Such 'dual' properties found for animal-derived L-929 PNGase are unique and are not shared with other previously characterized plant- and bacterial-origin PNGases--PNGase A and PNGase F, respectively.
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