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Target Concepts:
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Query: EC:3.1.6.4 (
chondroitinase
)
2,039
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The biological activity of many cytokines is regulated by binding proteins present at the cell surface, in extracellular matrices or in soluble phase. We describe here a TGF-beta binding protein that is both an extracellular matrix and a
cell surface protein
. When intact extracellular matrices of HEP-G2 cells were affinity cross-linked with 125I-TGF-beta 1, two major binding components were seen: a 250-kD, proteoglycan-like molecule, presumed to be betaglycan, and a 60-kD protein. The 60-kD TGF-beta-binding protein was also present at the cell surface. It could be released from the cell surface by treating cells with high salt, heparin, chondroitin sulfate, heparitinase, or
chondroitinase
, indicating that it is bound to heparan sulfate and chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans. The 60-kD protein bound TGF-beta 1 with an apparent dissociation constant of 1.6 nM, and there were 30,000 binding sites per cell at the cell surface. In addition to the HEP-G2 cells and another hepatoma cell line, the 60-kD protein was also found in a human colon carcinoma (HT-29) cell line but not in rat kidney (NRK-49F) or human fibroblast (HUT-12) cell lines. The 60-kD protein could be extracted from cells containing it and transferred to the surface of previously negative cells. The 60-kD protein may serve to regulate the binding of TGF-beta to its signal transducing receptors by targeting TGF-beta to appropriate locations in the microenvironment of cells.
...
PMID:A 60-kD protein mediates the binding of transforming growth factor-beta to cell surface and extracellular matrix proteoglycans. 833 95
Exposure to AG73, a synthetic peptide (LQVQLSIR) from the COOH-terminal region of the laminin alpha1 chain, induces a malignant phenotype in B16F10 melanoma cells. Coinjection of this peptide with the cells results in an increase of lung tumors and also the formation of liver tumors in approximately 50% of the mice (W. H. Kim et al., Int. J. Cancer, 77: 632-639, 1998). Here we have characterized the cell surface receptor and its functional groups on B16F10 cells. Peptide affinity chromatography identified a
cell surface protein
eluting with 1 M NaCl, which ran in SDS gels as a broad band of M(r) approximately 150,000-200,000. Digestion with heparitinase and
chondroitinase
produced a core protein of lower molecular weight (M(r) approximately 90,000). Involvement of the glycosaminoglycan (GAG) side chains was demonstrated by inhibition of cell binding to the peptide by heparin, heparan sulfate, and chondroitin sulfate B, but not by chondroitin sulfates A or C, or hyaluronic acid. The IC(50) for heparin was the lowest, followed by heparan sulfate, then chondroitin sulfate B, suggesting that the overall sulfation of the GAG side chain is critical. This was confirmed by inhibition of attachment with chemically modified heparin and heparan sulfate, which also showed that N or O linkages were not important for function. Using sized heparin fragments to inhibit cell binding to the peptide demonstrated that 16-mer is the minimum length required. B16F10 cells form a network when grown on Matrigel, and this is prevented by addition of the AG73 peptide. The GAGs alone did not affect network formation, but heparin, heparan sulfate, and chondroitin sulfate B reversed the inhibitory effect of the peptide, whereas other GAGs were inactive. Furthermore, removal of cell surface GAGs inhibited cell attachment to the peptide. Cells treated with glycosidases and coinjected with the peptide formed liver tumors equal to the control group receiving no peptide, suggesting that the GAGs play an early role in peptide-mediated tumor metastasis. These data indicate that the B16F10 cell receptor for a laminin metastasis-promoting sequence is a heparan sulfate/chondroitin sulfate-containing proteoglycan, and these GAG side chains are functionally important in the cell-peptide interaction.
...
PMID:The B16F10 cell receptor for a metastasis-promoting site on laminin-1 is a heparan sulfate/chondroitin sulfate-containing proteoglycan. 1206 3
Prions replicate in the host cell by the self-propagating refolding of the normal
cell surface protein
, PrP(C), into a beta-sheet-rich conformer, PrP(Sc). Exposure of cells to prion-infected material and subsequent endocytosis can sometimes result in the establishment of an infected culture. However, the relevant cell surface receptors have remained unknown. We have previously shown that cellular heparan sulfates (HS) are involved in the ongoing formation of scrapie prion protein (PrP(Sc)) in chronically infected cells. Here we studied the initial steps in the internalization of prions and in the infection of cells. Purified prion "rods" are arguably the purest prion preparation available. The only proteinaceous component of rods is PrP(Sc). Mouse neuroblastoma N2a, hypothalamus GT1-1, and Chinese hamster ovary cells efficiently bound both hamster and mouse prion rods (at 4 degrees C) and internalized them (at 37 degrees C). Treating cells with bacterial heparinase III or chlorate (a general inhibitor of sulfation) strongly reduced both binding and uptake of rods, whereas
chondroitinase
ABC was inactive. These results suggested that the cell surface receptor of prion rods involves sulfated HS chains. Sulfated glycans inhibited both binding and uptake of rods, probably by competing with the binding of rods to cellular HS. Treatments that prevented endocytosis of rods also prevented the de novo infection of GT1-1 cells when applied during their initial exposure to prions. These results indicate that HS are an essential part of the cellular receptor used both for prion uptake and for cell infection. Cellular HS thus play a dual role in prion propagation, both as a cofactor for PrP(Sc) synthesis and as a receptor for productive prion uptake.
...
PMID:Heparan sulfate is a cellular receptor for purified infectious prions. 1566 47