Abstract

Sugar specific lectins (PNA, RCA I, LPA, SBA, DBA, GSA IB4, GSA II, WGA, LTA, UEA I, Con A, LCA) with and without prior selective glycosidase digestion (sialidase, alpha-fucosidase, alpha-mannosidase, beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase, alpha- and beta-galactosidase, beta-glucosidase) were used in order to investigate the distribution of native accessible carbohydrates and obtain information dealing with the composition of terminal disaccharides within glycoconjugates present in acinar compartments and ductal segments of mammalian (mouse, rat, hare, and rabbit) parotid glands. Glycoconjugates containing variable amounts of mannose, glucose, N-acetylgalactosamine and N-acetylglucosamine were present in the parotid glands of all species. However, these carbohydrate chains exhibited a different composition of terminal sequences within each type of gland. For example, sialylated components having the terminal dimers sialic acid-galactose and sialic acid-N-acetylgalactosamine were found in all acinar cells, whereas fucoglycoconjugates with terminal disaccharide fucose-galactose were localized in the rat striated ducts and hare acinar cells. The terminal sequence alpha-galactose-beta-galactose was demonstrated in the mouse acinar cells. Finally, glycoconjugates characterized by the terminal dimer beta-galactose-N-acetylgalactosamine were demonstrated in the mouse acinar and ductal cells and the rat ductal ones. Thus, present findings outlined and further confirmed the possibility to elucidate the oligosaccharide structure in situ using lectin histochemistry combined with enzymatic degradation.

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