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Query: EC:3.1.6.12 (
chondroitinase
)
2,183
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Proteins with affinities for specific glycosaminoglycans (GAC's) were used as probes for testing the potential of cell surface GAG's to mediate cell adhesive responses to extracellular matrices (ECM). Plasma fibronectin (FN) and proteins that bind hyaluronate (cartilage proteo-glycan core and link proteins) or heparan sulfate (
platelet factor 4
[PF4]) were adsorbed to inert substrata to evaluate attachment and spreading of several 3T3 cell lines. Cells failed to attach to hyaluronate-binding substrata. The rates of attachment on PF4 were identical to those on FN; however, PF4 stimulated formation of broad convex lamellae but not tapered cell processes fibers during the spreading response. PF4-mediated responses were blocked by treating the PF4-adsorbed substratum with heparin (but not chondroitin sulfate), or alternatively the cells with Flavobacter heparinum heparinase (but not
chondroitinase
ABC). Heparinase treatment did not inhibit cell attachment to FN but did inhibit spreading. Cells spread on PF4 or FN contained similar Ca2+-independent cell-substratum adhesions, as revealed by EGTA-mediated retraction of their substratum-bound processes. Microtubular networks reorganized in cells on PF4 but failed to extend into the broadly spread lamellae, where fine microfilament bundles had developed. Stress fibers, common on FN, failed to develop on PF4. These experiments indicate that (a) heparan sulfate proteoglycans are critical mediators of cell adhesion and heparan sulfate-dependent adhesion via PF4 is comparable in some, but not all, ways to FN-mediated adhesion, (b) the uncharacterized and heparan sulfate-independent "cell surface" receptor for FN permits some but not all aspects of adhesion, and (c) physiologically compatible and complete adhesion of fibroblasts requires binding of extracellular matrix FN to both the unidentified "cell surface" receptor and heparan sulfate proteoglycans.
...
PMID:Cell surface heparan sulfate mediates some adhesive responses to glycosaminoglycan-binding matrices, including fibronectin. 621 15
Platelet factor 4, a unique peptide released during platelet aggregation, can bind to natural sulfated glycosaminoglycans from human renal cortex. The glycosaminoglycan isolate contained components sensitive to hyaluronidase,
chondroitinase
ABC and nitrous acid. Binding was demonstrated by the change in electrophoretic mobility of
platelet factor 4
applied in combination with glycosaminoglycan compared to either applied alone. This effect, which occurred at physiologic pH but not at acidic pH or with high ionic strength, was preserved in samples subjected to prior hyaluronidase and
chondroitinase
digestion. Further demonstration that
platelet factor 4
can interact with heparan sulfate anionic sites in the glomerular microvascular matrix was obtained by incubating radiolabeled
platelet factor 4
with isolated rat glomeruli, and with purified human and rat glomerular basement membrane, followed by displacement with heparin. Total binding and heparin-released binding were decreased in glomerular basement membrane prepared from diabetic patients and from rats with streptozotocin-diabetes compared to control samples. These findings implicate
platelet factor 4
in the pathogenesis of the altered capillary integrity associated with diabetes, and provide novel evidence that heparan sulfate anionic sites in glomerular basement membrane are diminished in human and experimental diabetes.
...
PMID:Platelet factor 4 binding to glomerular microvascular matrix. 669 9
Platelet-derived chemokines, such as regulated on activation, normal T expressed and secreted (RANTES; CC chemokine ligand 5),
platelet factor 4
[PF4; CXC chemokine ligand 4 (CXCL4)], and epithelial neutrophil-activating protein 78 (ENA-78; CXCL5), or precursors, such as beta-thromboglobulin, which can be processed to neutrophil-activating protein-2 (NAP-2; CXCL7), may play an important role in monocyte recruitment during atherogenesis. Platelets can deposit chemokines on inflamed endothelium; however, little is known about differential or additive effects of platelet chemokines on monocyte arrest. Here, we demonstrate that preincubation of activated human microvascular endothelial cells (HMVECs) with RANTES, PF4, or NAP-2 but not ENA-78 dose-dependently increased surface immobilization and subsequent monocyte arrest in flow. RANTES was the most potent and efficient arrest chemokine. Pretreatment of HMVECs with beta-thromboglobulin enhanced monocyte arrest in the presence of cathepsin G generating NAP-2. Combined pretreatment of HMVECs with RANTES and PF4 at suboptimal concentrations synergistically increased arrest, and preincubation with
chondroitinase
ABC abrogated RANTES- and PF4-induced monocyte arrest. This was associated with reduced expression of chondroitin sulfate, RANTES, and PF4 on the HMVEC surface. Perfusion of HMVECs with platelets known to deposit RANTES and PF4 on the endothelial surface enhanced monocyte arrest, which was inhibited by Met-RANTES,
chondroitinase
, or a blocking antibody to PF4 but not to ENA-78. The relevance of platelet-derived chemokines was confirmed in adhesion assays with activated whole blood, where Met-RANTES and to a lesser extent, antibodies to PF4 and NAP-2 inhibited arrest of CD14-positive monocytes. Thus, multiple platelet-derived chemokines and processable precursors, which can be presented by specific endothelial proteoglycans, may contribute and cooperate differentially to induce monocyte recruitment.
...
PMID:Differential and additive effects of platelet-derived chemokines on monocyte arrest on inflamed endothelium under flow conditions. 1589 84
We tested the possibility that immune complexes formed following
platelet factor 4
(PF4/CXCL4) binding to anti-PF4 antibody can stimulate neutrophil activation, similar to previous reports with platelets. Monoclonal Abs against PF4 and IgG from a heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT) patient were applied. We observed that although PF4 or anti-PF4 antibody alone did not alter neutrophil function, costimulation with both reagents resulted in approximately 3-fold increase in cell surface Mac-1 expression, enhanced cell adhesion via L-selectin and CD18 integrins, and degranulation of secondary and tertiary granules. The level of Mac-1 up-regulation peaked at an intermediate PF4 dose, suggesting that functional response varies with antigen-antibody stoichiometry. PF4 binding to neutrophils was blocked by
chondroitinase
ABC. Cell activation was inhibited by both
chondroitinase
ABC and anti-CD32/FcgammaRII blocking mAb, IV.3. Confocal microscopy demonstrated that immune complexes colocalize with CD32a. Studies with HIT IgG demonstrated that neutrophils could be activated in the absence of exogenous heparin. These data, together, show that leukocyte surface chondroitin sulfates promote neutrophil activation by enhancing immune-complex binding to CD32a. Studies with recombinant PF4 suggest a role for arginine 49 in stabilizing PF4-chondroitin binding. Neutrophils activated via this mechanism may contribute to thrombosis and inflammation in patients mounting an immune response to PF4-heparin.
...
PMID:Immune complexes formed following the binding of anti-platelet factor 4 (CXCL4) antibodies to CXCL4 stimulate human neutrophil activation and cell adhesion. 1853 95
Antibodies specific for
platelet factor 4
(
PF4
)/heparin complexes are the hallmark of heparin-induced thrombocytopenia and thrombosis (HIT), but many antibody-positive patients have normal platelet counts. The basis for this is not fully understood, but it is believed that antibodies testing positive in the serotonin release assay (SRA) are the most likely to cause disease. We addressed this issue by characterizing
PF4
-dependent binding of HIT antibodies to intact platelets and found that most antibodies testing positive in the SRA, but none of those testing negative, bind to and activate platelets when
PF4
is present without any requirement for heparin (P < .0001). Binding of SRA-positive antibodies to platelets was inhibited by
chondroitinase
ABC digestion (P < .05) and by the addition of chondroitin-4-sulfate (CS) or heparin in excess quantities. The findings suggest that although all HIT antibodies recognize
PF4
in a complex with heparin, only a subset of these antibodies recognize more subtle epitopes induced in
PF4
when it binds to CS, the major platelet glycosaminoglycan. Antibodies having this property could explain "delayed HIT" seen in some individuals after discontinuation of heparin and the high risk for thrombosis that persists for weeks in patients recovered from HIT.
...
PMID:Heparin-independent, PF4-dependent binding of HIT antibodies to platelets: implications for HIT pathogenesis. 2534 14