Abstract

In the present work we compared the appearance of carbohydrate binding sites for mannose, maltose, sialic acid and N-acetyl-glucosamine in the 11 to 13-day-old mouse embryo with the appearance of BSA and lectin binding sites. The carbohydrate-binding sites were localized with FITC-coupled neoglycoproteins, synthesized by chemical glycosylation of bovine serum albumin (BSA). These localizations were compared with binding of the FITC-labelled unglycosylated BSA. Furthermore the localizations of neoglycoprotein and BSA binding sites were correlated with binding of the FITC-labelled lectins WGA, RCA I and Con A. Initial appearance of neoglycoprotein binding sites occurred in the lens capsule of the 13 day old mouse embryo. Binding sites for the unglycosylated BSA appeared earlier, i.e. already in the 12-day-old embryo, in the basement membranes of the choroid plexus and the lung bud and lectin binding sites were seen in these structures in the 11-day-old embryo. The staining of the basement membrane and the lens capsule for BSA binding sites in the 12-and 13-day-old embryos correspond to WGA binding to these membranes. From these results we concluded that 1) specific carbohydrates which are probably involved in embryonic development appear much earlier in the embryo than the endogenous lectins which are able to react with these carbohydrates and 2) BSA is a protein which like WGA probably binds N-acetylglucosamine or sialic acid moieties.

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