Abstract

We have previously demonstrated by the immunoperoxidase method the presence of a chicken heterophile antigenic determinant (CHAD-1) in medullary lymphocytes of the bursa of Fabricius and thymus as well as in some nonlymphoid cells. It has been found that the anti-CHAD-1 antibody could be neutralized by absorption with several glycoproteins or glycopeptides containing highly branched, asparagine-linked oligosaccharides terminating in N-acetylglucosamine residues. In the present study, fetuin, desialo-fetuin, and a series of 27 highly purified oligosaccharides with well-defined structures were used to investigate the chemical composition and fine structure of the CHAD-1 epitope. It was shown that anti-CHAD-1 antibody binds to oligosaccharides with at least three terminal N-acetyl glucosamine residues at the nonreducing end. These residues may be linked beta 1-2, beta 1-4, or beta 1-6 to one, two, or three different mannose residues. The antibody combining site accommodates at least four carbohydrate residues. Oligosaccharides containing five or six terminal N-acetylglucosamine residues at the nonreducing end demonstrated the highest immunoreactivity with the anti-CHAD-1 antibody. Substitution of terminal N-acetylglucosamine residues with galactose, or with galactose and sialic acid, masks CHAD-1. On the basis of this work, epitopes that react with the anti-CHAD-1 antibody will be renamed terminal N-acetylglucosamine cluster antigens (TGCA). Anti-TGCA antibody has potential use in the monitoring of biosynthetic processing of asparagine-linked oligosaccharides and in studies of their cellular distribution and functions.

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