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PubMed:1840294 / 213-223 JSONTXT

Leukosialin, a major O-glycan-containing sialoglycoprotein defining leukocyte differentiation and malignancy. Leukosialin, also called CD43 or sialophorin, is a major sialoglycoprotein expressed widely in various leukocytes (granulocytes, monocytes/macrophages and T-lymphocytes). Leukosialin is heavily glycosylated by O-linked oligosaccharides (70-80 oligosaccharides/molecule) and the structures of those O-glycans are characteristic to each cell lineage and differentiation stage. In particular, the branched hexasaccharide, NeuNAc alpha 2----3Gal beta 1----3(NeuNAc alpha 2----3Gal beta 1----4GlcNAc beta 1----6)GalNAc is specifically expressed in activated T-lymphocytes as well as in thymocytes and T-lymphocytes from patients with leukaemia, and immuno-deficiency syndromes. A portion of these O-glycans are attached to a domain with tandem repeats in the polypeptide of leukosialin. However, the entire translation product, including such tandem repeats, is coded by one exon and a short novel promoter sequence confers the expression of the leukosialin gene. Leukosialin is apparently involved in T-cell-B-cell interaction during immune reaction and binds to ligands on antigen-presenting B-cells. These results imply that leukosialin plays critical roles in immune cell interaction and differences in attached O-glycans most likely influence the interaction of leukosialin with ligands.
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