Miyagi T, Sagawa J, Konno K, Handa S, Tsuiki S
Biochemistry Laboratory, Tohoku University, Miyagi.
J Biochem. 1990 May;107(5):787-93. doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.jbchem.a123126.
Ganglioside-hydrolyzing sialidase activity was solubilized from rat brain particulate fraction by using Triton X-100 plus sodium deoxycholate. When chromatographed on AH-Sepharose 4B, the solubilized activity was resolved into two peaks, which were designated sialidases I and II in order of elution. The two sialidases were purified by using sequential chromatographies on Octyl-Sepharose CL-4B, Phenyl-Sepharose CL-4B, and Sephadex G-200. Sialidase II was purified further by Mono Q-FPLC. Overall purification was 450- and 2,150-fold, for sialidases I and II, respectively. Purified sialidases I and II were maximally active at near pH 5.0 and exhibited M = 70,000 by gel filtration. Sialidase I hydrolyzed gangliosides but scarcely other substrates including 4-methylumbelliferyl-NeuAc (4MU-NeuAc). Sialidase II hydrolyzed oligosaccharides, glycoproteins, and 4MU-NeuAc although gangliosides appeared to be preferential substrates. Sialidase II cleaved GM2 much faster than sialidase I. An antibody raised in rabbits against sialidase I reacted with only sialidase I and an antibody against sialidase II reacted with only sialidase II. A subcellular distribution study suggested sialidase I in the synaptosomal membrane and sialidase II in the synaptosomal and lysosomal membranes, and this was verified by using the above antibodies.