The Major Surface Carbohydrates of the Echinococcus granulosus Cyst: Mucin-Type O-Glycans Decorated by Novel Galactose-Based Structures †

2009 
The cestodes constitute important but understudied human and veterinary parasites. Their surfaces are rich in carbohydrates, on which very little structural information is available. The tissue-dwelling larva (hydatid cyst) of the cestode Echinococcus granulosus is outwardly protected by a massive layer of carbohydrate-rich extracellular matrix, termed the laminated layer. The monosaccharide composition of this layer suggests that its major carbohydrate components are exclusively mucin-type O-glycans. We have purified these glycans after their release from the crude laminated layer and obtained by MS and NMR the complete structure of 10 of the most abundant components. The structures, between two and six residues in length, encompass a limited number of biosynthetic motifs. The mucin cores 1 and 2 are either nondecorated or elongated by a chain of Galpβ1-3 residues. This chain can be capped by a single GalpR1-4 residue, such capping becoming more dominant with increasing chain size. In addition, the core 2 N-acetylglucosamine residue is in cases substituted with the disaccharide GalpR1-4Galpβ1-4, giving rise to the blood P 1-antigen motif. Larger, also related, glycans exist, reaching at least 18 residuesin size. The glycans described are related but larger than those previously described from an Echinococcus multilocularis mucin (Hulsmeier, A. J., et al. (2002)J. Biol. Chem. 277, 5742-5748). Our results reveal that theE. granulosus cyst exposes to the host only a few different major carbohydrate motifs. These motifs are composed essentially of galactose units and include the elongation by (Galpβ1-3) n and the capping by GalpR1-4, novel in animal mucin-type O-glycans.
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