Abstract

Snails from the family Helicidae produce in their albumen glands a highly branched galactan, which consists almost exclusively of D- and L-galactose. The D-Gal residues are glycosydically beta(1-->6)- or beta(1-->3)-linked, whereas the L-Gal moieties are attached alpha(1-->2). Up until the present time, two beta(1-->6)-D-galactosyl transferases and one alpha(1-->2)-L-galactosyl transferase have been identified in a membrane preparation of these glands. These were used to synthesise various oligosaccharides by successive addition of the NDP-activated (NDP=nucleoside-5'-diphosphate) D-Gal or L-Fuc moieties, up to a heptasaccharide by starting from the disaccharide D-Gal-beta(1-->3)-D-Gal-beta(1-->OMe. Even larger oligosaccharides up to a tridecasaccharide were obtained by starting with the hexasaccharide D-Gal-[beta(1-->3)-D-Gal]4-beta(1-->4)-D-Glc as an acceptor substrate. This tandem exploitation process has high potential for the easy introduction of D-Gal and L-Fuc residues into a great variety of oligosaccharides, which can be used in ligand/acceptor studies.

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