A GENETIC APPROACH TO MAMMALIAN GLYCAN FUNCTION
The four essential building blocks of cells are proteins, nucleic acids, lipids, and glycans. Also referred to as carbohydrates, glycans are composed of saccharides that are typically linked to lipids and proteins in the secretory pathway. Glycans are highly abundant and diverse biopolymers, yet the...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Annual review of biochemistry 2003-01, Vol.72 (1), p.643-691 |
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Zusammenfassung: | The four essential building blocks of cells are proteins, nucleic acids,
lipids, and glycans. Also referred to as carbohydrates, glycans are composed of
saccharides that are typically linked to lipids and proteins in the secretory
pathway. Glycans are highly abundant and diverse biopolymers, yet their
functions have remained relatively obscure. This is changing with the advent of
genetic reagents and techniques that in the past decade have uncovered many
essential roles of specific glycan linkages in living organisms. Glycans appear
to modulate biological processes in the development and function of multiple
physiologic systems, in part by regulating protein-protein and cell-cell
interactions. Moreover, dysregulation of glycan synthesis represents the
etiology for a growing number of human genetic diseases. The study of glycans,
known as glycobiology, has entered an era of renaissance that coincides with
the acquisition of complete genome sequences for multiple organisms and an
increased focus upon how posttranslational modifications to protein contribute
to the complexity of events mediating normal and disease physiology. Glycan
production and modification comprise an estimated 1% of genes in the
mammalian genome. Many of these genes encode enzymes termed
glycosyltransferases and glycosidases that reside in the Golgi apparatus where
they play the major role in constructing the glycan repertoire that is found at
the cell surface and among extracellular compartments. We present a review of
the recently established functions of glycan structures in the context of
mammalian genetic studies focused upon the mouse and human species.
Nothing tends so much to the advancement of knowledge as the application
of a new instrument. The native intellectual powers of men in different times
are not so much the causes of the different success of their labours, as the
peculiar nature of the means and artificial resources in their
possession.
T. Hager:
Force of Nature
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ISSN: | 0066-4154 1545-4509 |
DOI: | 10.1146/annurev.biochem.72.121801.161809 |