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. 1983 Apr 1;211(1):55–63. doi: 10.1042/bj2110055

Comparative study of the carbohydrate moieties of normal and pathological human immunoglobulins M.

A Cahour, P Debeire, L Hartmann, J Montreuil
PMCID: PMC1154328  PMID: 6870828

Abstract

The well-known heterogeneity of normal and pathological immunoglobulins M was investigated in a study involving the characterization of their carbohydrate moieties. Oligosaccharide units were released from the native molecule by hydrazinolysis, and they were fractionated by affinity chromatography on a concanavalin A-Sepharose column to yield separate N-acetyl-lactosaminic-type and oligomannosidic-type structures. Further identification of these oligosaccharides was attempted by t.l.c. on silica gel and by determination of their monosaccharide compositions. A comparative study of the oligosaccharide units belonging to each population of immunoglobulin M was possible. Similarities were found in the occurrence of both types of oligosaccharide structures, and, in addition, a common double heterogeneity could be demonstrated for N-acetyl-lactosaminic-type structures: they could be resolved by affinity chromatography into bi-, tri- and tetra-antennary structures, and they also showed differences in N-acetylneuraminic acid content. Though some variations were observed in the exact composition of the oligosaccharide units within each population, it was possible to consider a representative oligosaccharide-unit composition of normal immunoglobulin M as a standard for comparison. On this basis a predominance of multi-antennary structures was observed in the more glycosylated pathological immunoglobulins M (10% carbohydrate content), whereas oligomannosidic structures were increased in pathological immunoglobulins M with a lower content of carbohydrates (7%). These variations are thought to reflect differences in the biosynthetic processing pathway of the carbohydrate units of the pathological immunoglobulins M or the enhanced expression of a molecular clone.

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Selected References

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