|  | Recent Advances in Structural Glycobiology |  | 
     
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      |  | Rapid progress in structural biology has great influence 
        on glycobiology. The crystal structure of a galactosyltransferase in complex 
        with sugar-nucleotide and an acceptor analogue reported in 2001 has provided 
        the structural basis of the formation of glycosidic bonds. Three-dimensional 
        structures of glycoside hydrases such as  -mannosidase 
        have been reported one after another, some of which have been classified 
        into a novel fold. Knowledge on structural basis of interactions between 
        proteins and glycoconjugates has expanded: the crystal structure of human 
        P-selectin complexed with a cognate glycopeptide visualizes a mode of 
        binding of the selectin to the glycan as well as to the polypeptide containing 
        sulfated tyrosine residues. Crystal structures of MHC class I molecules 
        presenting glycopeptide and CD1 molecules presenting glycolipids have 
        also been reported recently. Inspection of these data underlines the importance 
        of structural studies not only of liberated glycans but also of those 
        conjugated with intrinsic carriers (lipids or polypeptides). 
 Although the biological importance of glycans expressed on proteins has 
        been widely recognized, little is known about their specific roles from 
        the structural aspect. This deficiency in our knowledge is largely due 
        to the lack of an appropriate methodology to deal with glycoproteins as 
        targets of structural biology. Carbohydrate moieties exhibit microheterogeneities 
        and possess a significant degree of freedom in internal motion, which 
        hampers crystallization or interpretation of electron density. Hence, 
        X-ray crystallographic analyses of glycoproteins have so far been carried 
        out with deglycosylated glycoproteins. Recently, crystallographic studies 
        using recombinant glycoproteins produced in insect cells have been widely 
        attempted.
 
 Prior to conformational analyses of glycoproteins, their glycoforms must 
        be determined in advance. Recent advances in HPLC mapping and mass spectrometric 
        techniques allow us to determine the covalent structures of glycans of 
        glycoproteins, which greatly facilitates the development of structural 
        biology of glycoproteins. Now it is possible to perform NMR analyses of 
        glycoproteins whose glycans are labeled with stable isotopes by metabolic 
        labeling via biosynthetic pathways of mammalian cells or by in 
        vitro enzymatic glycosylation onto isolated glycoproteins. This is 
        opening up a new way for the elucidation of atomic resolution of the structure, 
        dynamics, and interaction of glycoproteins in solution.
 
 Structural biology of glycoconjugates is an unexplored field beyond structural 
        genomics, which is highly thought of at present. It is essential to develop 
        this field and decode the biological signals expressed by glycans.
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      |  | Fig. 1 |  | 
     
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      |  | Koichi Kato (Graduate School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Nagoya City University)
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            | References | (1) | Persson K, Ly HD, Dieckelmann M, Wakarchuk WW, Withers SG, Strynadka 
              NC: Crystal structure of the retaining galactosyltransferase LgtC 
              from Neisseria meningitides in complex with donor and acceptor sugar 
              analogs. Nature Struct. Biol. 8, 166-175, 2001 |   
            |  | (2) | Somers WS, Tang J, Shaw GD, Camphausen RT: Insights into the molecular 
              basis of leukocyte tethering and rolling revealed by structures. 
              Cell 103, 467-479, 2000 |   
            |  | (3) | Yamaguchi Y, Kato K: Structural biology 
              of glycoproteins of immunological interest, SEIKAGAKU 
              74, 43-46, 2002 |   
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      | Oct. 31, 2002 | 
     
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