The
Consortium for Functional Glycomics (http://web.mit.edu/glycomics/consortium/main.shtml) (CFG) is funded by the (US)
National Institute of General Medical Sciences (
http://www.nigms.nih.gov/) (NIGMS).
The CFG is a large research initiative to understand the role of carbohydrate-protein interactions at the cell surface in cell-cell communication.
Its scientific aims are, for each carbohydrate binding protein (CBP):
- Define the specificity and affinity of the selected CBP for natural and synthetic carbohydrate ligands
- For each CBP, establish the cell types involved in cell communication
- For each CBP, identify the ligands on biologically relevant cell types and determine the carbohydrate structure(s) that mediate CBP binding
- For each of the selected CBPs determine how CBP-ligand interactions mediate cell communication
- Determine the structures of selected CBPs
- For each CBP identify the glycosyltransferases (or degradative enzymes) responsible for expression of its carbohydrate ligand
- Determine the extent to which regulation of glycosylation modulates the expression of CBP ligands and controls CBP function
It includes:
- UCSD School of Medicine's Glycobiology Research and Training Center (GRTC)
- The Shemyakin & Ovchinnikov Institute (Moscow, Russia)
It also includes additional participating investigators from a dozen or so other universities worldwide.
All Wikipedia text
is available under the
terms of the GNU Free Documentation License