• Title/Summary/Keyword: gangliosides xenotransplantation

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Differential expression patterns of gangliosides in the tissues and cells of NIH-mini pig kidneys

  • Cho, Jin-Hyoung;Kim, Ji-Su;Lee, Young-Choon;Oh, Keon-Bong;Kwak, Dong-Hoon;Kim, Won-Sin;Hwang, Seong-Soo;Ko, Ki-Sung;Chang, Kyu-Tae;Choo, Young-Kug
    • Animal cells and systems
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    • v.14 no.2
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    • pp.83-89
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    • 2010
  • Gangliosides are a ubiquitous component of the membranes of mammalian cells that have been suggested to play important roles in various cell functions such as cell-cell interaction, adhesion, cell differentiation, growth control and signaling. However, the role that gangliosides play in the immune rejection response in xenotransplantation is not yet clearly understood. In this study, differential expression patterns of gangliosides in HEK293 (human embryonic kidney cells), PK15 (porcine kidney cells), NIH-kd (NIH-mini pig kidney cells, primary cultured) and the cortex, medulla and calyx of the NIH-mini pig kidney were investigated by high-performance thin-layer chromatography (HPTLC). The results revealed that HEK293, PK15 and NIH-kd contained GM3, GM2 and GD3 as major gangliosides. Moreover, GM3, which are the gangliosides of NIH-kd, were expressed at higher levels than HEK293 and PK15. Especially, GT1b were expressed in HEK293 and NIH-kd but not in PK15. Finally, GM1 and GD1a were expressed in NIH-kd, but not in HEK293 or PK15. These results suggest that differential expression patterns of gangliosides from HEK293, PK15 and NIH-kd are related to the immune rejection response in xenotransplantation.

Differential Expression Patterns of Gangliosides in the Liver and Heart of NIH-miniature Pigs (NIH-미니돼지의 간과 심장에서 갱글리오시드의 서로 다른 발현 패턴)

  • Ryu, Jae-Sung;Chang, Kyu-Tae;Kim, Ji-Su;Kwak, Dong-Hoon;Lee, Young-Choon;Oh, Keon-Bong;Choo, Young-Kug
    • Journal of Life Science
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    • v.20 no.4
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    • pp.467-473
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    • 2010
  • Gangliosides are a major component of the plasma membrane of mammalian cells, which are directly involved in a variety of immunological events, including cell-to cell or cell-to-protein interactions. In this study, we investigated whether gangliosides, sialic acid-containing glycosphingolipids, are related to rejection during the xenotransplantation of NIH-miniature pig livers and hearts to humans. Both high performance thin-layer chromatography and immunohistochemistry analyses revealed that the expression of gangliosides in the liver tissue of NIH-miniature pigs was higher than that in the heart. Gangliosides GD3, GD1a, GD1b, GT1b and GQ1b were observed in both the liver and heart, whereas GQ1b was detected only in the liver, indicating that the ganglioside expression profiles are tissue specific. Moreover, other ganglio-series gangliosides, including GM3, were not detected in the livers and hearts of NIH-miniature pigs. Taken together, these results suggest that gangliosides may play important roles in immune responses in clinical xenotransplants of pig livers and hearts.