Ganglioside
A ganglioside is a molecule composed of a glycosphingolipid with one or more sialic acids linked on the sugar chain. NeuNAc, an acetylated derivative of the carbohydrate sialic acid, makes the head groups of gangliosides anionic at pH 7, which distinguishes them from globosides.
The name ganglioside was first applied by the German scientist Ernst Klenk in 1942 to lipids newly isolated from ganglion cells of the brain. More than 60 gangliosides are known, which differ from each other mainly in the position and number of NANA residues. It is a component of the cell plasma membrane that modulates cell signal transduction events, and appears to concentrate in lipid rafts.
Recently, gangliosides have been found to be highly important molecules in immunology. Natural and semisynthetic gangliosides are considered possible therapeutics for neurodegenerative disorders.
Location
Gangliosides are present and concentrated on cell surfaces, with the two hydrocarbon chains of the ceramide moiety embedded in the plasma membrane and the oligosaccharides located on the extracellular surface, where they present points of recognition for extracellular molecules or surfaces of neighboring cells. They are found predominantly in the nervous system where they constitute 6% of all lipids.Function
The oligosaccharide groups on gangliosides extend well beyond the surfaces of the cell membranes, and act as distinguishing surface markers that can serve as specific determinants in cellular recognition and cell-to-cell communication. These carbohydrate head groups also act as specific receptors for certain pituitary glycoprotein hormones and certain bacterial protein toxins such as cholera toxin.The functions of gangliosides as specific determinants suggest its important role in the growth and differentiation of tissues as well as in carcinogenesis. It has been found that tumor formation can induce the synthesis of a new complement of ganglioside, and very low concentrations of a specific ganglioside can induce differentiation of cultured neuronal tumor cells.
Common gangliosides
- One NANA
- * GM1
- * GM2
- * GM3
- Two NANAs
- * GD1a
- * GD1b
- * GD2
- * GD3
- Three NANAs
- * GT1b
- * GT3
- Four NANAs
- * GQ1
Structures of the common gangliosides
GM3 = aNeu5AcbDGalpbDGlcpCer
GM2,GM2a = N-Acetyl-D-galactose-beta-1,4--Galactose-beta-1,4-glucose-alpha-ceramide
GM2b = aNeu5AcaNeu5AcbDGalpbDGlcpCer
GM1,GM1a = bDGalpbDGalNAcbDGalpbDGlcpCer
asialo-GM1,GA1 = bDGalpbDGalpNAcbDGalpbDGlcpCer
asialo-GM2,GA2 = bDGalpNAcbDGalpbDGlcpCer
GM1b = aNeu5AcbDGalpbDGalNAcbDGalpbDGlcpCer
GD3 = aNeu5AcaNeu5AcbDGalpbDGlcpCer
GD2 = bDGalpNAcbDGalpbDGlcpCer
GD1a = aNeu5AcbDGalpbDGalNAcbDGalpbDGlcpCer
GD1alpha = aNeu5AcbDGalpbDGalNAcbDGalpbDGlcpCer
GD1b = bDGalpbDGalNAcbDGalpbDGlcpCer
GT1a = aNeu5AcaNeu5AcbDGalpbDGalNAcbDGalpbDGlcpCer
GT1,GT1b = aNeu5AcbDGalpbDGalNAcbDGalpbDGlcpCer
OAc-GT1b = aNeu5AcbDGalpbDGalNAcaXNeu5Ac9AcaNeu5Ac]bDGalpbDGlcpCer
GT1c = bDGalpbDGalNAcbDGalpbDGlcpCer
GT3 = aNeu5AcaNeu5AcaNeu5AcbDGalbDGlcCer
GQ1b = aNeu5AcaNeu5AcbDGalpbDGalNAcbDGalpbDGlcpCer
GGal = aNeu5AcbDGalpCer
where
- aNeu5Ac = N-acetyl-alpha-neuraminic acid
- aNeu5Ac9Ac = N-acetyl-9-O-acetylneuraminic acid
- bDGalp = beta-D-galactopyranose
- bDGalpNAc = N-acetyl-beta-D-galactopyranose
- bDGlcp = beta-D-glucopyranose
- Cer = ceramide
Pathology
File:Sphingolipidoses.svg|center|thumb|upright=2.75|A summary showing the causes of sphingolipidosis, including gangliosidosis.
Gangliosides are also involved in several diseases:
- Influenza, in which haemagglutinin of influenza virus exploits certain gangliosides to enter and infect the cells expressing them.
- Guillain–Barré syndrome, which has been linked to the production of anti-ganglioside antibodies.
- Cholera
- Tetanus
- Botulism
- Leprosy
- Obesity, where inadequate ganglioside expression in mediobasal hypothalamic neurons deregulates neuronal leptin and insulin signaling.