acid-phosphatase and metaperiodate

acid-phosphatase has been researched along with metaperiodate* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for acid-phosphatase and metaperiodate

ArticleYear
Lipophosphoglycan and secreted acid phosphatase of Leishmania tropica share species-specific epitopes.
    Molecular and biochemical parasitology, 1990, Volume: 41, Issue:2

    Several species-specific monoclonal antibodies (T11, T13-T15) which only react with Leishmania tropica, recognize phosphorlated carbohydrate epitopes on lipophosphoglycan and the structurally related molecule, phosphoglycan, which is shed by promastigotes into spent culture medium. During immunoaffinity isolation of [32P]orthophosphate-labeled phosphoglycan on monoclonal antibody T15 conjugated to Sepharose 4B, a high-Mr component (approx. 200,000) was co-purified. The latter material is metabolically labeled with [35S]methionine and [3H]glucosamine. This glycoprotein was separated from phosphoglycan by chromatography on lentil lectin resin. The glycoprotein exhibited a L-tatrate-sensitive acid phosphatase activity, typical of secreted acid phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.2) from Leishmania. Monospecific antibodies to Leishmania donovani-secreted acid phosphatase selectively precipitated the L. tropica enzyme from immunoaffinity purified mixtures of the two antigens, and monoclonal antibodies to lipophosphoglycan precipitate the pure enzyme. Species-specific monoclonal antibodies to L. major lipophosphoglycan also recognized both L. tropica antigens. Treatment of the acid phosphatase with periodate or phosphodiesterase I abolished binding by the monoclonal antibodies to the pure enzyme. These results demonstrate that the two major secreted glycoconjugates of Leishmania tropica, the lipophosphoglycan and the acid phosphatase, share species-specific phosphorylated carbohydrate epitope(s).

    Topics: Acid Phosphatase; Animals; Antibodies, Monoclonal; Antigens, Protozoan; Blotting, Western; Epitopes; Glycosphingolipids; Leishmania donovani; Leishmania tropica; Monensin; Periodic Acid; Precipitin Tests; Species Specificity

1990
Some histochemical observations on Gaucher cells.
    Basic and applied histochemistry, 1986, Volume: 30, Issue:4

    Plastic-embedded bone marrow biopsies from four patients with Gaucher's disease have been studied histochemically. Concanavalin A (ConA) was found to bind to cytoplasmic inclusions of Gaucher cells; the binding was prevented by lipid extraction or beta-glucosidase digestion. This suggests that glucocerebrosides stored in Gaucher cells are responsible for ConA binding; ConA staining combined with lipid extraction and beta-glucosidase digestion tests may be taken as a tool for the demonstration of Gaucher's cerebrosides of possible practical importance in diagnosis and investigation of Gaucher's disease. An excess of vic-glycol groups with respect to ConA binding-sugar residues and not extractable by lipid solvents are demonstrable in Gaucher cells. Vic-glycols appear to be regularly arranged at the electron microscopy level within Gaucher cell lysosomes along typical Gaucher "tubules", where some kind of interaction between lipid and protein should occur. Acid phosphatase might be one protein species involved in such interaction.

    Topics: Acid Phosphatase; beta-Glucosidase; Bone Marrow; Concanavalin A; Gaucher Disease; Glucosylceramides; Histocytochemistry; Humans; Inclusion Bodies; Lysosomes; Methenamine; Microscopy, Electron; Periodic Acid; Silver; Staining and Labeling

1986