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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)
Previous studies have shown that bovine retinas incubated with [3H]galactose incorporated it, unmodified, into large molecules. Light and electron microscope autoradiography showed a significant proportion of the label to be in cone inner segments, and pulse-chase studies showed it was subsequently transported to the synaptic pedicles. In this report, evidence is presented to show that the galactose-labelled macromolecules are resistant to hydrolysis by proteolytic enzymes, testicular
hyaluronidase
,
chondroitinase
ABC, beta-glucosidase and beta-glucuronidase, but are readily degraded by alpha-amylase and beta-galactosidase, and to a lesser extent by beta-amylase. Treatment with alpha-amylase also leads to specific removal of radioactivity from cone inner segments and pedicles, as judged by light-microscopic autoradiography. These studies appear to indicate that the cone-specific galactose label is in glycogen or glycogen-like molecules.
...
PMID:D-[3H]galactose incorporation into glycogen in retinal cone cells. 231 72
We undertook an interdisciplinary biomechanical and biochemical study to explore the extent and manner in which the total pool of proteoglycans influences the kinetic and static behavior of bovine articular cartilage in tension. Two biomechanical tests were used: (a) the viscoelastic creep test and (b) a slow constant-rate uniaxial tension test; and two enzymatic proteoglycan extraction procedures were used: (a)
chondroitinase
ABC treatment and (b) a sequential enzymatic treatment with
chondroitinase
ABC, trypsin, and Streptomyces
hyaluronidase
. We found that the viscoelastic creep response of all cartilage specimens may be divided into two distinct phases: an initial phase (less than 15 s), characterized by a rapid increase in strain following load application, and a late phase (15 s less than or equal to t less than 25,000 s), characterized by a more gradual increase in strain. A major finding of this study is that the kinetics of the creep response is greatly influenced by the glycosaminoglycan content of the tissue. For untreated and control specimens, the initial response comprises about 50% of the total strain, while for
chondroitinase
ABC and sequentially extracted specimens, the initial response comprises up to 83% of the total strain. Furthermore, most untreated and control specimens did not reach equilibrium within the 25,000 s test period, while enzymatically digested specimens often reached equilibrium in less than 100 s. Thus, we conclude that through their physical restraints on collagen, the bulk of proteoglycan present in the tissue acts to retard fibrillar reorganization and alignment under tensile loading, thereby effectively preventing sudden extension of the collagen network. In contrast, the results of our slow constant-rate uniaxial tension experiment show that essentially complete extraction of proteoglycan glycosaminoglycans does not affect the intrinsic tensile stiffness and strength of cartilage specimens or the collagen network in a significant manner. Hence, an important function of the bulk proteoglycans (i.e., the large aggregating type) in cartilage is to retard the rate of stretch and alignment when a tensile load is suddenly applied. This mechanism may be useful in protecting the cartilage collagen network during physiological situations, where sudden impact forces are imposed on a joint.
...
PMID:Effects of proteoglycan extraction on the tensile behavior of articular cartilage. 232 54
This paper reports an unrecognized aspect of phosphotungstic acid staining at low pH. It provides an on-section staining method in which sialic acid-containing molecules can be demonstrated in the laminae rarae of the rat glomerular basement membrane. The staining in the basement membrane became negative after perfusion with the following cations: protamine sulphate, hexadimethrine, Alcian Blue, Ruthenium Red and Toluidine Blue. Blocking was not achieved with Alcian Blue at about pH 1. The staining was also abolished after mild methylation and demethylation restored the contrast. This is suggestive of the involvement of carboxyl groups. Prior digestion with pronase, trypsin and neuraminidase rendered the laminae rarae negative, whereas
hyaluronidase
,
chondroitinase
ABC and crude heparinase were without effect. This indicates that sialic acid groups are detected by this method and that heparan sulphate does not interfere. The staining of the epithelial plasma membrane, also carrying sialic acid groups, remained positive after neuraminidase treatment. It is presumed that this method can be applied successfully for detecting changes in the sialic acid content of the laminae rarae in rat glomerular basement membranes under normal and pathological conditions.
...
PMID:Demonstration of sialic acid groups in the glomerular basement membrane of the rat with phosphotungstic acid at low pH. 241 Mar 95
Pseudocysts are unique structures found in adenoid cystic carcinomata of human salivary glands. They were studied in 13 such cases by histochemical and immunohistochemical means. The pseudocysts contained an abundance of mucoid materials which reacted strongly with both Alcian Blue and dialysed iron ferrocyanide. The mucoid material was digested with
chondroitinase
ABC and heparitinase, but was resistant to Streptomyces
hyaluronidase
. The inner surfaces of the pseudocysts were strongly reactive for laminin, whereas the interface between the tumour cell nests and the outer stromal area was intensely reactive for fibronectin. Numerous fibronectin-reactive fibrils and blood coagulation factor XIII (F-XIII)-positive cells were distributed extensively in the outer stromal area. The F-XIII-positive cells were also found within some pseudocysts. The results obtained in the present study have shown that the pseudocysts represent a peculiar structure consisting of basement membrane components; laminin, fibronectin, heparan sulphate and chondroitin sulphate.
...
PMID:Histochemical studies on pseudocysts in adenoid cystic carcinoma of the human salivary gland. 241 89
We have studied the distribution of anionic sites in the basal lamina of developing human amniotic epithelium by using the cationic stain ruthenium red. Amnions at 7-12 weeks of gestation and at term contained ruthenium red-positive granules in a quasi-regular array on both the cellular and interstitial sides of the lamina densa. In order to characterize the anionic sites, small pieces of amnion were incubated in the presence or absence of either
chondroitinase
ABC, neuraminidase, Streptomyces
hyaluronidase
, or heparitinase in appropriate buffer systems. Incubation in the presence of heparitinase resulted in the complete disappearance of the basal lamina-associated granules, but other enzymes tested had no demonstrable effect on these granules. We conclude that the anionic sites associated with amnion basal lamina, and demonstrable with ruthenium red, consist of glycosaminoglycans rich in heparan sulfate, probably present as heparan sulfate proteoglycan. Because amniotic fluid has a low protein content and amniotic epithelium (at least at term) lacks tight junctions, we postulate that the heparan sulfate proteoglycan associated with the amnion basal lamina may have an important function as a permeability barrier to anionic macromolecules.
...
PMID:Distribution and characterization of anionic sites in the basal lamina of developing human amniotic epithelium. 241 50
The basal lamina of the embryonic submandibular epithelium is a dynamic compartment of the extracellular matrix required for branching morphogenesis. A transmission electron microscopy (TEM) structural analysis of the basal lamina, at a time of intense branching activity, was conducted, comparing standard glutaraldehyde-fixed preparations with ones that included tannic acid in the primary fixative, and comparing anionic site resolution and distribution with two cationic probes, ruthenium red (RR) and polyethyleneimine (PEI). Standard TEM revealed a conventional basal lamina structure, with a lamina densa, a lamina lucida interna and a lamina lucida externa. Fine filaments emanated from the lamina densa, traversing both lamina lucidae. Tannic acid revealed approximately 35 nm diameter electron-dense particles in the lamina densa with a spacing repeat of approximately 45 nm. Basal lamina anionic sites were resolved as approximately 26 nm diameter RR-particles and approximately 50 nm diameter PEI-particles, present in the lamina lucida interna and associated with the lamina lucida externa. RR-particle linear spacing was 70 nm in the externa and 50 nm in the interna, while the PEI-particle spacing repeat was 90 nm in both compartments. Binding of both probes was blocked by testicular
hyaluronidase
or
chondroitinase
treatment, a result suggesting that the anionic sites were chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan, hyaluronic acid, or both. The greater particle spacing observed with PEI was not simply a physical limitation resulting from the average PEI particle diameter being almost twice that of RR particles, since PEI-resolved anionic sites on interstitial collagen were much more closely spaced (approximately 60 nm) than RR-resolved sites (approximately 105 nm).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Basal lamina anionic sites in the embryonic submandibular salivary gland: resolution and distribution using ruthenium red and polyethyleneimine as cationic probes. 242 18
We have isolated a syngeneic monoclonal antibody (HepSS-1) reactive to a murine methylcholanthrene-induced fibrosarcoma, Meth-A. HepSS-1 also bound to a wide variety of established and fresh normal cells derived from not only mice but also other species such as human, monkey, rat, hamster, and chicken. Immunoprecipitation of surface iodinated Meth-A cell extract with HepSS-1, as well as Sepharose 4B gel chromatography of Meth-A cell extract and detection of antigens recognized by HepSS-1 by a sandwich-type radioimmunoassay revealed that the HepSS-1 antigens were composed of several molecular species, with one as large as approximately 10(6) daltons. The following evidence indicates that HepSS-1 specifically recognizes an epitope present in heparan sulfate glycosaminoglycan (HS-GAG). First, treatment of Meth-A cells with heparitinase or heparinase, but not with
chondroitinase
ABC or
hyaluronidase
, resulted in the loss of HepSS-1 binding. Second, HS-GAG but not seven other types of GAG (hyaluronic acid, heparin, chondroitin, chondroitin 4-sulfate, chondroitin 6-sulfate, dermatan sulfate, and keratan sulfate) inhibited HepSS-1 binding to Meth-A cells. Third, HepSS-1 bound with HS-GAG but not with the seven other types of GAG. From the binding analysis of HepSS-1 to various modified HS-GAG and whale omega-heparin, it is additionally suggested that HepSS-1 recognizes an epitope closely related to O-sulfated and N-acetylated glucosamine. We found that NIH 3T3 cells expressed more HepSS-1 epitopes at a low cell density than at confluency and in G2 + M than in G1, whereas NIH 3T3 cells transformed with Kirsten-ras oncogene or SV-40 expressed high levels of HepSS-1 epitopes and ceased to show the density-dependent change in the amount of HepSS-1 epitopes. These observations were also reproduced by using NIH 3T3 cells transformed with a temperature sensitive Kirsten murine sarcoma virus maintained at permissive and non-permissive temperatures. Thus HepSS-1 is a first monoclonal antibody to HS-GAG and seems to be useful to elucidate changes in cell surface HS-GAG in normal cell growth and cell transformation.
...
PMID:A syngeneic monoclonal antibody to murine Meth-A sarcoma (HepSS-1) recognizes heparan sulfate glycosaminoglycan (HS-GAG): cell density and transformation dependent alteration in cell surface HS-GAG defined by HepSS-1. 243 Oct 47
Salt extracts of the extracellular matrix (ECM) that is produced by vascular and capillary endothelial cells contain mitogens that are indistinguishable from basic and acidic fibroblast growth factors (FGFs). The biological activity found in these extracts is retained by heparin-Sepharose affinity columns and elutes with salt concentrations similar to those required to elute FGFs (i.e. 1.1 - 2M NaCl). Antisera raised against synthetic fragments of basic and acidic FGF crossreact with the ECM-derived mitogens. Radioiodinated basic FGF binds to the ECM formed by both vascular and capillary endothelial cells, a result that is consistent with the observation that FGF-like mitogens are found on the ECM. The binding of FGF to the ECM is negligible when the ECM has been pretreated with heparinase or heparitinase suggesting that the mitogen is interacting with a heparin-like glycosaminoglycan in the ECM. The digestion of the ECM with several grades of
hyaluronidase
,
chondroitinase
or chondro-4-sulfatase or chondro-6-sulfatase has little or no effect on 125I-FGF binding to the ECM. In view of the fact that many, if not all cells, produce heparan sulfates and that these glycosaminoglycans are associated with the external surface of the cell and the ECM, a model is proposed suggesting that the neovascular response induced by tumours and some normal tissues may be mediated at least in part, by the initial release of heparinase-like enzymes rather than angiogenic factors (FGFs) per se. The release of these enzymes would effectively mobilize a secondary local release of FGF from the ECM which then induces a proliferative response.
...
PMID:Fibroblast growth factors are present in the extracellular matrix produced by endothelial cells in vitro: implications for a role of heparinase-like enzymes in the neovascular response. 243 94
Monoclonal antibodies produced against chick embryo limb bud proteoglycan (PG-M) were selected for their ability to recognize determinants on intact chondroitin sulfate chains. One of these monoclonal antibodies (IgM; designated MO-225) reacts with PG-M, chick embryo cartilage proteoglycans (PG-H, PG-Lb, and PG-Lt), and bovine nasal cartilage proteoglycan, but not with Swarm rat chondrosarcoma proteoglycan. The reactivity of PG-H to MO-225 is not affected by keratanase digestion but is completely abolished after
chondroitinase
digestion. Competitive binding analyses with various glycosaminoglycan samples indicate that the determinant recognized by MO-225 resides in a D-glucuronic acid 2-sulfate(beta 1----3)N-acetylgalactosamine 6-sulfate disaccharide unit (D-unit) common to antigenic chondroitin sulfates. A tetrasaccharide trisulfate containing D-unit at the reducing end is the smallest chondroitin sulfate fragment that can inhibit the binding of the antibody to PG-H. Decreasing the size of a D-unit-rich chondroitin sulfate by
hyaluronidase
digestion results in progressive reduction in its inhibitory activity. The results suggest that the epitope has a requirement for a long stretch of a disaccharide-repeating structure for a better fit to the antibody.
...
PMID:A monoclonal antibody that specifically recognizes a glucuronic acid 2-sulfate-containing determinant in intact chondroitin sulfate chain. 243 33
Cytotactin is an extracellular matrix protein that is involved in neuron-glia adhesion and is found in both neural and nonneural sites. It is synthesized by glia but not by neurons. In this study, we have examined the binding of cytotactin to a variety of extracellular matrix components using uniform microscopic beads (Covaspheres) that could be labeled and then linked to purified molecules. Cytotactin-coated beads bound well to neurons, and this binding was strongly inhibited by anti-cytotactin antibodies but not by anti-neural cell adhesion molecule (anti-N-CAM) antibodies. In contrast, the binding of N-CAM-coated beads to neurons was inhibited by anti-N-CAM antibodies and not by anti-cytotactin antibodies. To identify a neuronal ligand for cytotactin, we tested several molecules for their ability to block the binding of cytotactin-coated beads to cells. A proteoglycan-containing fraction that copurified with cytotactin from brain extracts strongly inhibited binding, whereas neither a heparan sulfate proteoglycan from Engelbreth-Holm-Swarm tumor cells nor soluble cytotactin itself had a significant inhibitory effect. The neural proteoglycan also inhibited the binding of cytotactin-coated beads to fibroblasts. Digestion with
chondroitinase
, heparitinase, and
hyaluronidase
as well as immunological analyses suggested that the predominant species in the active fraction was a chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan with a Mr280,000 core protein bearing HNK-1 antigenic determinants and also indicated that hyaluronic acid was present in this fraction. In experiments on in vitro synthesis, it was found that the proteoglycan was synthesized in culture by embryonic chicken brain tissue but not by embryonic chicken glial cells. A series of binding experiments was performed on appropriately derivatized beads to confirm that the proteoglycan is a ligand for cytotactin and to check for the possibility that other extracellular matrix proteins might interact with one or the other member of this binding couple. Proteoglycan-coated beads and cytotactin-coated beads coaggregated readily. The aggregation was inhibitable by anti-cytotactin antibodies, soluble cytotactin, or soluble proteoglycan. Addition of laminin inhibited the binding of cytotactin-coated beads to proteoglycan-coated beads or to cells; this is consistent with data indicating that laminin interacts with a component of the proteoglycan-containing fraction. In contrast, fibronectin bound to cytotactin, but it did not bind to proteoglycan or interfere with the binding of cytotactin to proteoglycan. The results of this study are in accord with the idea that the functions of extracellular matrix components during neural and nonneural development may be modulated both by competition for shared cell surface receptors and by a network of molecular interactions among the matrix components themselves.
...
PMID:A proteoglycan with HNK-1 antigenic determinants is a neuron-associated ligand for cytotactin. 243 34
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