Biology Reference
In-Depth Information
References
1. Takahashi N, Hotta T, Ishihara H et al (1986)
Xylose-containing common structural unit in
N-linked oligosaccharides of laccase from syca-
more cells. Biochemistry 25:388-395
2. Terashima M, Kubo A, Suzawa M et al (1994)
The roles of the N-linked carbohydrate chain of
rice
12. Villarejo A, Burén S, Larsson S et al (2005)
Evidence for a protein transported through
the secretory pathway en route to the higher
plant chloroplast. Nat Cell Biol 7:1224-1231
13. Nanjo Y, Oka H, Ikarashi N et al (2006) Rice
plastidial N -glycosylated nucleotide pyrophos-
phatase/phosphodiesterase is transported
from the ER-Golgi to the chloroplast through
the
-amylase in thermostability and enzyme
kinetics. Eur J Biochem 226:249-254
3. Hayashi M, Tsuru A, Mitsui T et al (1990)
Structure and biosynthesis of the xylose-
containing carbohydrate moiety of rice
α
α
secretory
pathway.
Plant
Cell
18:2582-2592
14. Kitajima A, Asatsuma S, Okada H et al (2009)
The rice
-amylase. Eur J Biochem 191:287-295
4. Bardor M, Faveeuw C, Fitchette A-C et al
(2003) Immunoreactivity in mammals of two
typical plant glyco-epitopes, core
-amylase glycoprotein is targeted
from the Golgi apparatus through the secre-
tory pathway to the plastids. Plant Cell
21:2844-2858
15. Burén S, Ortega-Villasante C, Blanco-Rivero
A et al (2011) Importance of post-translational
modifi cations for functionality of a chloroplast-
localized carbonic anhydrase (CAH1) in
Arabidopsis thaliana . PLoS One 6:1-15
16. Nishimura S-I, Niikura K, Kurogochi M et al
(2005) High-throughput protein glycomics:
Combined use of chemoselective glycoblot-
ting and MALDI-TOF/TOF mass spectrom-
etry. Angew Chem Int Ed 44:91-96
17. Uematsu R, Frukawa J, Nakagawa H et al
(2005) High throughput quantitative
glycomics and glycoform-focused proteomics
of murine dermis and epidermis. Mol Cell
Proteomics 4:1977-1989
18. Furukawa J, Shinohara Y, Kuramoto H et al
(2008) Comprehensive approach to structural
and functional glycomics based on chemose-
lective glycoblotting and sequential tag con-
version. Anal Chem 80:1094-1101
19. Amano M, Yamaguchi M, Takegawa Y et al
(2010) Threshold in stage-specifi c embryonic
glycotypes uncovered by a full portrait of
dynamic N -glycan expression during cell dif-
ferentiation. Mol Cell Proteomics 9:523-537
20. Abe M, Shimaoka H, Fukushima M, Nishimura
S-I (2012) A cross-linked polymer possessing a
high density of hydrazide groups: high-
throughput glycan purifi cation and labeling
for high-performance liquid chromatography
analysis. Polym J 44:267-277
α
(1,3)-
fucose and core xylose. Glycobiology
13:427-434
5. Lerouge P, Cabanes-Macheteau M, Rayon C
et al (1998) N -glycoprotein biosynthesis in
plants: recent developments and future trends.
Plant Mol Biol 38:31-48
6. Hashimoto K, Goto S, Kawano S et al (2006)
KEGG as a glycome informatics resource.
Glycobiology 16:63R-70R
7. Cooper CA, Gasteiger E, Packer NH (2001)
GlycoMod—a software tool for determining
glycosylation compositions from mass spectro-
metric data. Proteomics 1:340-349
8. Cooper CA, Harrison MJ, Wilkins MR, Packer
NH (2001) GlycoSuiteDB: a new curated rela-
tional database of glycoprotein glycan struc-
tures and their biological sources. Nucleic
Acids Res 29:332-335
9. Saint-Jore-Dupas C, Nebenführ A, Boulafl ous
A et al (2006) Plant N -glycan processing
enzymes employ different targeting mecha-
nisms for their spatial arrangement along the
secretory pathway. Plant Cell 18:3182-3200
10. Kajiura H, Koiwa H, Nakazawa Y et al (2010)
Two Arabidopsis thaliana Golgi
α
-mannosidase
I enzymes are responsible for plant N -glycan
maturation. Glycobiology 20:235-247
11. Asatsuma S, Sawada C, Itoh K et al (2005)
Involvement of
α
-amylase I-1 in starch degra-
dation in rice chloroplasts. Plant Cell Physiol
46:858-869
α
Search WWH ::




Custom Search