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monosialylated

Monosialylated refers to molecules, typically glycoproteins or glycolipids, that carry a single sialic acid residue as part of their glycans. Sialic acids are a family of acidic sugars, with N-acetylneuraminic acid (Neu5Ac) being the most common in humans. In glycoconjugates, sialylation commonly occurs at the terminal positions of N-linked or O-linked glycans; monosialylated structures have one sialic acid per glycan chain, while others may be di-, tri-, or polysialylated.

Physiochemical and biological consequences: the terminal sialic acid imparts a negative charge at physiological pH, increasing

Biosynthesis: sialyltransferases add sialic acid to terminal galactose residues during glycan assembly, while neuraminidases can remove

Detection and analysis: monosialylation can be assessed by mass spectrometry, chromatographic release and labeling of glycans,

hydrophilicity
and
influencing
molecular
recognition.
Monosialylated
glycans
can
modulate
interactions
with
lectins
and
cell-surface
receptors,
and
they
affect
serum
half-life
by
influencing
clearance
pathways
such
as
the
asialoglycoprotein
receptor,
which
preferentially
removes
desialylated
glycoconjugates.
In
therapeutic
proteins,
sialylation
patterns,
including
monosialylation,
are
a
key
quality
attribute
because
they
affect
stability,
immunogenicity,
and
pharmacokinetics.
it.
Variation
in
enzyme
activity,
substrate
availability,
and
processing
can
yield
monosialylated
forms.
or
lectin-binding
assays
using
sialic-acid–binding
lectins.
Understanding
monosialylation
is
relevant
for
biology,
biopharmaceutical
development,
and
glycoengineering.