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O-linked oligosaccharides

Many functional glycoproteins are expressed on the lymphocyte cell surface. Some of them carry O-linked oligosaccharides (O-glycans), which are conjugated through serine or threonine residues.

During various biological processes, including T-cell activation, a tetrasaccharide on the T-cell surface is dramatically converted to a branched hexasaccharide, called core2 O-glycan.

The same structural change in O-glycans is also found on the lymphocytes from patients with immunodeficiency conditions such as Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome and AIDS.

Several studies revealing the roles of core2 O-glycans in immune responses show that this is a biologically significant change.

In particular, core2 O-glycans expressed on the cell surface reduce cell-cell interactions, thereby regulating immune responses. Furthermore, core2 O-glycan is a key backbone structure in forming selectin ligands.

Thus, O-linked oligosaccharides, in particular those containing core2 branches, play vital roles in immune responses and may play dual roles in certain situations.

See also

- selectin and selectin ligands

References

- Tsuboi S, Fukuda M. Roles of O-linked oligosaccharides in immune responses. Bioessays. 2001 Jan;23(1):46-53. PMID: #11135308#