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I organized this symposium, "Molecular Immunology of Complex
Carbohydrates-2 (MICC-2)," at the Institute of Biological
Chemistry, Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan th between August
28-September 2, 1999, as a satellite meeting of the 15
International Glycoconjugate Conference (held August 22-27 in
Tokyo, Japan). I also held a Taiwan- Canada Glycobiology Workshop
after this meeting at the Institutes of Biological Chemistry and
Chemistry. To promote glycobiology in Taiwan, I offered a Complexs
Carbohydrate & Medicine-2 workshop at the Glyco- Research
Laboratory, College of Medicine, Chang- Gung University, Kwei-san,
Tao-yuan, Taiwan before the MICC-2 symposium. The lecture and
poster materials of these three meetings are collected in these
proceedings, which are divided into five Sections and two
Appendixes. Section I, entitled "Protein-Carbohydrate Interactions
of Plant and Animal Lectins," provides current concepts of
lectin-carbohydrate interactions; classification of lectins, based
on amino acid sequences, molecular structures, and lectin affinity
for carbohydrates. However, the relationships between amino acid
sequences and carbohydrate affinity of lectins have to be more
thoroughly characterized. The reviews on animal lectins in this
Section explore new areas of lectins. Section II, "Aspects of
Structure and Antigenicity of Glycoconjugates," provides important
information on structural concepts of glyco- immunology. "Glycotope
Expression (Glycosylation), Metabolism and Functions," which play
important roles in life processes, are discussed in Section III.
Four articles on advances in knowledge on structural roles of
glycans and treatment of cancer are discussed in Section IV.
Based on the proceedings of the third international symposium on
"Molecular Immunology of Complex Carbohydrates," this text is the
latest in a series dedicated to glycotopes, structures and
functions of complex carbohydrates, recognition factors of lectins,
biomolecular interactions and other glycosciences. Section I of the
book pays tribute to three pioneers in the field--Walter T.J.
Morgan, Elvin A. Kabat and especially Winifred M. Watkins; it
presents advanced concepts concerning the structure and functions
of Blood group ABH/Le-related antigens, offering a comprehensive
review on human blood group ABH/Ii, Lea, b, x, y and siayl Lea, x
glycotopes of human ovarian cyst glycoproteins. Section II covers
the interactions of plant, bacterial and animal lectins with
carbohydrates and proteins. Section III describes the structures
and functions of gangliosides and microbial glycolipids. Section IV
covers the physiological roles of other clycocunjugates in humans,
animals, sponges and bacteria as well as aging-related alterations
of glycosylation profile in humans. Section V discusses the role of
carbohydrates as antigens and regulators of the immune response.
Section VI addresses some aspects of the glycobiology of cancer.
And section VII details new methodologies in glycol-synthesis and
lectin-carbohydrate binding assays and strategies for treatment as
crucial applications.
Based on the third symposium on "Molecular Immunology of Complex
Carbohydrates," this text covers the latest in glycotopes,
structures and functions of complex carbohydrates, recognition
factors of lectins, biomolecular interactions and other
glycosciences. This volume highlights the informative events of the
Symposium on Molecular Immunology of Complex Carbohydrates III,
held at the Institute of Biological Chemistry, Academia Sinica, on
July 15-20, 2007, in Taipei, Taiwan.
I organized this symposium, "Molecular Immunology of Complex
Carbohydrates-2 (MICC-2)," at the Institute of Biological
Chemistry, Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan th between August
28-September 2, 1999, as a satellite meeting of the 15
International Glycoconjugate Conference (held August 22-27 in
Tokyo, Japan). I also held a Taiwan- Canada Glycobiology Workshop
after this meeting at the Institutes of Biological Chemistry and
Chemistry. To promote glycobiology in Taiwan, I offered a Complexs
Carbohydrate & Medicine-2 workshop at the Glyco- Research
Laboratory, College of Medicine, Chang- Gung University, Kwei-san,
Tao-yuan, Taiwan before the MICC-2 symposium. The lecture and
poster materials of these three meetings are collected in these
proceedings, which are divided into five Sections and two
Appendixes. Section I, entitled "Protein-Carbohydrate Interactions
of Plant and Animal Lectins," provides current concepts of
lectin-carbohydrate interactions; classification of lectins, based
on amino acid sequences, molecular structures, and lectin affinity
for carbohydrates. However, the relationships between amino acid
sequences and carbohydrate affinity of lectins have to be more
thoroughly characterized. The reviews on animal lectins in this
Section explore new areas of lectins. Section II, "Aspects of
Structure and Antigenicity of Glycoconjugates," provides important
information on structural concepts of glyco- immunology. "Glycotope
Expression (Glycosylation), Metabolism and Functions," which play
important roles in life processes, are discussed in Section III.
Four articles on advances in knowledge on structural roles of
glycans and treatment of cancer are discussed in Section IV.
During the past three decades, the sugar moiety of complex
carbohydrates has been found to be involved in important
interactions of immunological specificity of antigens and to
participate in a variety of cellular functions. The long
polysaccharide side chains of the lipopolysaccharides on the outer
membrane of Gram negative organisms provide surface antigens for
differential serodiagnosis. Bacterial surface lectins are important
in mediating the attachment of bacteria to host cells in the of
infectious diseases. The carbohydrate pathogenesis moieties of cell
surface glycoconjugates (glycoproteins and glycolipids) of mammals
are the sites for intercellular recognition and for the regulatory
molecular interactions such as interaction of complex carbohydrate
with hormones or hepatic lectins. The carbohydrate side chains of
many complex carbohydrates play essential roles as antigenic
determinants b of human blood group ABH, Lea, Le , I, and i
activities, as the Forssman specific determinant, and as tumor
associated antigenic determinants. Prompted by these and other
advances in the field, a Symposium on Molecular Immunology of
Complex Carbohydrates was organized as a satellite meeting of the
8th International Glycoconjugate Conference held on September 8-
13, 1985, in Houston, Texas, U. S . A. Many eminent scientists
contributed their knowledge at this meeting. The lecture and poster
materials of the symposium are contained in this proceeding book,
which is divided into four Sections and one Appendix. Section I is
entitled Antibody Specificity, Epitope, and Lectinology. Dr. Elvin
A.
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