27 research outputs found

    Regulated Transport Network Design Using Geographical Resolution

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    High Throughput Quantitative Glycomics and Glycoform-focused Proteomics of Murine Dermis and Epidermis

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    Despite recent advances in our understanding of the significance of the protein glycosylation, the throughput of protein glycosylation analysis is still too low to be applied to the exhaustive glycoproteomic analysis. Aiming to elucidate the N-glycosylation of murine epidermis and dermis glycoproteins, here we used a novel approach for focused proteomics. A gross N-glycan profiling (glycomics) of epidermis and dermis was first elucidated both qualitatively and quantitatively upon N-glycan derivatization with novel, stable isotope-coded derivatization reagents followed by MALDI-TOF(/TOF) analysis. This analysis revealed distinct features of the N-glycosylation profile of epidermis and dermis for the first time. A high abundance of high mannose type oligosaccharides was found to be characteristic of murine epidermis glycoproteins. Based on this observation, we performed high mannose type glycoform-focused proteomics by direct tryptic digestion of protein mixtures and affinity enrichment. We identified 15 glycoproteins with 19 N-glycosylation sites that carry high mannose type glycans by off-line LC-MALDI-TOF/TOF mass spectrometry. Moreover the relative quantity of microheterogeneity of different glycoforms present at each N-glycan binding site was determined. Glycoproteins identified were often contained in lysosomes (e.g. cathepsin L and gamma-glutamyl hydrolase), lamellar granules (e.g. glucosylceramidase and cathepsin D), and desmosomes (e g. desmocollin 1, desmocollin 3, and desmoglein). Lamellar granules are organelles found in the terminally differentiating cells of keratinizing epithelia, and desmosomes are intercellular junctions in vertebrate epithelial cells, thus indicating that N-glycosylation of tissue-specific glycoproteins may contribute to increase the relative proportion of high mannose glycans. The striking roles of lysosomal enzymes in epidermis during lipid remodeling and desquamation may also reflect the observed high abundance of high mannose glycans

    N-Linked neutral oligosaccharides in the stratum corneum of normal and ichthyotic skin

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    N-Glycan oligosaccharides are thought to play multiple, important roles in a variety of biological events. However, N-glycan profiles in the stratum corneum of human skin have not yet been studied in detail. To clarify the N-glycan profiles in the stratum corneum of normal and ichthyotic epidermis, N-glycan profiles were studied by high-performance liquid chromatography using normal human epidermal samples and scales from hyperkeratotic skin of ichthyosis patients. Chromatograms of patient scale samples showed unique alterations in three peaks eluted at 15.8, 18.8 and 26.9 min. The N-glycan profiles were significantly altered in ichthyotic hyperkeratotic skin compared with normal non-hyperkeratotic controls. These findings indicate the reduction of N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase II and fucosyltransferase 8 activities. Alteration of N-glycan structures in hyperkeratotic skin suggests the biological role of N-glycans in keratinization

    Distributed IP Refactoring: Cooperation with Optical Transport Layer and Centralized SDN

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    End-to-End Redundancy and Maintenance Condition Design for Nationwide Optical Transport Network

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