Novel lacto-ganglio type gangliosides with GM2-epitope in bovine brain which react with IgM from a patient of the amyotrophic lateral sclerosis-like disorder.
1993
Abstract A motor neuron disorder resembling that of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis was found in a patient who had received the intramuscular administration of a mixture of bovine brain gangliosides (Yuki, N., Sato, S., Miyatake, T., Sugiyama, K., Katagiri, T., and Sasaki, H. (1991) Lancet 337, 1109-1110). A very high titer of anti-GM2 IgM was detected in the patient's serum and the patient quickly recovered after plasmapheresis. The clinical course of the patient appeared to be different from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and the anti-GM2 IgM was thought to be the culprit. The IgM reacted with GM2, GM1b-GalNAc, SPG(alpha 2-3)-GalNAc, and GD1a-GalNAc, but not with GA2 or GD2, meaning that the epitope recognized by the IgM was the GM2-like terminal structure, GalNAc beta 1-4(Neu-Ac alpha 2-3)Gal beta 1-. In this study, we found two novel GM2-epitope containing gangliosides, X1 and X2, in bovine brain gangliosides by TLC immunostaining using the patient's IgM. They were characterized as unique lacto-ganglio type gangliosides containing the following branching structures. [formula: see text] Their unusual structures may be immunogenic to humans to induce anti-GM2 antibody.
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