Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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)

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.
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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

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.
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PMID:A proteoglycan with HNK-1 antigenic determinants is a neuron-associated ligand for cytotactin. 243 34

Eighteen specimens of palatal mucosa were taken from 17 human subjects. Paraffin-wax sections were stained by routine methods and with various techniques to demonstrate glycosaminoglycans (GAG). In some sections, GAG were removed by selective degradative procedures before staining. Beneath all rugae, there were myxoid areas varying in size and marginal definition. Collagen fibres were few; elastic and reticulin fibres were numerous in a minority of sections. Alcianophilia at pH 2.5, preventable by streptomyces hyaluronidase digestion, suggested the presence of hyaluronic acid beneath the rugae. Alcian-blue staining at pH 1.0 and with the critical electrolyte concentration method using 0.5 M MgCl2 did not distinguish the myxoid tissue from the surrounding connective tissue and could be prevented by digestion with testicular hyaluronidase or chondroitinase ABC. Chondroitin sulphate and, or dermatan sulphate thus may be present but were not localized to the myxoid tissue. This unusual zone of loose connective tissue may act as a physical buffer resisting the local effects of high loads by allowing reversible extrusion of the water.
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PMID:Histological localization of myxoid tissue in normal human palatal mucosa and its glycosaminoglycans. 244 96

The capacity of various blood-borne cells, whether normal or malignant, to extravasate was found to correlate with heparanase-mediated degradation of HS in subendothelial ECM. This degradation was stimulated by proteases or plasminogen and inhibited by native heparin and by various modified nonanticoagulant species of heparin. These heparins also induced a marked reduction in tumor cell metastasis and autoimmune diseases in experimental animals. Heparanase-mediated degradation of HS in ECM also released EC growth factors that are stored in ECM, most likely by high affinity binding to HS. Such growth factors were extracted from subendothelial ECM synthesized in vitro and from basement membranes of the cornea in vivo, and are structurally and functionally related to bFGF;bFGF binds to ECM and is readily released by incubation with either HS, heparin or low MW heparin fragments as well as by various normal and malignant cells and by heparanase-mediated degradation of ECM HS. In contrast, there was little or no release of growth-promoting activity upon incubation of ECM with hyaluronic acid, chondroitin sulfate or chondroitinase ABC. A model is proposed suggesting that regulation of capillary growth and neovascular response may result from displacement of an angiogenic protein (bFGF) from its storage sites within basement membranes.
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PMID:Involvement of heparanase in tumor metastasis and angiogenesis. 246 49

To gain insight into the cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying cell interactions in the early postnatal mouse cerebellum, Ca2+-dependent and -independent aggregation mechanisms were characterized using single cell suspensions under conditions that allow discrimination between the two mechanisms. When cerebellar cells were derived from newborn to 10-day-old mouse cerebellum, both mechanisms were active and showed no major change in activity during this time period. Mg2+ could not replace Ca2+ in the Ca2+-dependent mechanism. In contrast to the Ca2+-independent mechanisms, the Ca2+-dependent mechanism was inactive at low temperatures, suggesting a necessity for molecular rearrangement within the surface membrane during aggregation. Neuraminidase, chondroitinase, heparinase or hyaluronidase treatment of cells did not influence the aggregation of cells under Ca2+-dependent and -independent conditions. Chondroitin sulfate inhibited and hyaluronic acid stimulated the Ca2+-dependent mechanism, whereas chondroitin sulfate only slightly and hyaluronic acid strongly inhibited the Ca2+-independent one. Dextran sulfate slightly inhibited both mechanisms, whereas heparin and fucoidan, a complex sulfated carbohydrate, did not influence cell aggregation, while they strongly inhibited attachment of cells to laminin. The polycation poly-L-lysine slightly stimulated the Ca2+-independent mechanism, but inhibited the Ca2+-dependent one. Interestingly, chondroitin sulfate and hyaluronic acid strongly stimulated cell aggregation under conditions where both mechanisms were almost destroyed or inactive. Dextran sulfate showed only a small effect under these conditions. These observations indicate that different molecular mechanisms are active in cell-cell versus cell-extracellular matrix interactions and suggest a hitherto unknown complexity in molecular mechanisms during early postnatal cerebellar development.
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PMID:Characterization of Ca2+-dependent and -independent aggregation mechanisms among mouse cerebellar cells. 246 13

Basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) exhibits specific binding to the extracellular matrix (ECM) produced by cultured endothelial cells. Binding was saturable as a function both of time and of concentration of 125I-bFGF. Scatchard analysis of FGF binding revealed the presence of about 1.5 X 10(12) binding sites/mm2 ECM with an apparent kD of 610nM. FGF binds to heparan sulfate (HS) in ECM as evidenced by (i) inhibition of binding in the presence of heparin or HS at 0.1-1 micrograms/mL, but not by chondroitin sulfate, keratan sulfate, or hyaluronic acid at 10 micrograms/mL, (ii) lack of binding to ECM pretreated with heparitinase, but not with chondroitinase ABC, and (iii) rapid release of up to 90% of ECM-bound FGF by exposure to heparin, HS, or heparitinase, but not to chondroitin sulfate, keratan sulfate, hyaluronic acid, or chondroitinase ABC. Oligosaccharides derived from depolymerized heparin, and as small as the tetrasaccharide, released the ECM-bound FGF, but there was little or no release of FGF by modified nonanticoagulant heparins such as totally desulfated heparin, N-desulfated heparin, and N-acetylated heparin. FGF released from ECM was biologically active, as indicated by its stimulation of cell proliferation and DNA synthesis in vascular endothelial cells and 3T3 fibroblasts. Similar results were obtained in studies on release of endogenous FGF-like mitogenic activity from Descemet's membranes of bovine corneas. It is suggested that ECM storage and release of bFGF provide a novel mechanism for regulation of capillary blood vessel growth. Whereas ECM-bound FGF may be prevented from acting on endothelial cells, its displacement by heparin-like molecules and/or HS-degrading enzymes may elicit a neovascular response.
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PMID:Basic fibroblast growth factor binds to subendothelial extracellular matrix and is released by heparitinase and heparin-like molecules. 254 64

Hyaluronate levels change dramatically during morphogenesis of various tissues and organs. Morphological detection of the exact temporal and spatial distribution patterns of hyaluronate may help to elucidate its role in morphogenesis. Since no specific direct method for visualizing hyaluronate with the light or electron microscope is currently available, we have developed a morphological probe by exploiting the high-affinity interaction of cartilage proteoglycan with hyaluronate. The core protein of this proteoglycan consists of a region that binds specifically to hyaluronate with a high association constant, and a region to which the majority of sulfated polysaccharide chains are covalently attached. The polysaccharide chains were removed by treatment with chondroitinase ABC, and the core protein, labeled with rhodamine, was used as the probe. This fluorescent probe binds reversibly and specifically to [3H]hyaluronate in a binding assay using ammonium sulfate precipitation of the core protein. The probe has been used to visualize the cell surface hyaluronate of rat fibrosarcoma cells, 3T3 cells, and SV-40 transformed 3T3 cells, three cell types with significantly different amounts of cell surface-associated hyaluronate.
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PMID:Fluorescent morphological probe for hyaluronate. 258 Aug 46

Seventy five prostatic specimens from cancer, BPH and normal controls were studied by light microscopic histochemical methods for the demonstration of complex carbohydrates and some proteins: 1) alcian blue (AB) (pH 1.0), 2) alcian blue (AB) (pH 2.5), 3) Periodic Acid-Schiff (PAS), 4) peroxidase labelled-Ricinus communis agglutinin-diaminobenzidine (PO-RCA-DAB), 5) Concanavalin A-peroxidase-diaminobenzidine (ConA-PO-DAB), 6) ConA-PO-DAB-periodic acid-m-aminophenol Fast black salt K (ConA-PO-DAB-PA-AP-FBK). For identifying individual acidic and neutral carbohydrates, following procedures of enzyme digestion were performed upon some tissue sections prior to the above histochemical staining: a) sialidase (prior to staining with AB at pH 2.5), b) streptomyces hyaluronidase (prior to staining with AB at pH 2.5), c) testicular hyaluronidase (prior to staining with AB at pH 1.0 or pH 2.5), d) chondroitinase ABC (prior to staining with AB at pH 1.0 or pH 2.5), e) chondroitinase AC (prior to staining with AB at pH 1.0 or pH 2.5), f) alpha-amylase (prior to staining with PAS). In addition, the tissue specimens from prostatic cancer were stained immunohistochemically for demonstration of prostatic acid phosphatase (PAP) and the serum PAP levels were also measured by radioimmunoassay. The histochemical differences in the prostatic tissue among normal control, BPH and cancer as follows. In the tissue of prostatic cancer, chondroitin sulfate A, C and hyaluronic acid were present in the interstitium. Chondroitin sulfate, hyaluronic acid and sialic acid were present in the cytoplasm of cancer cells. In the tissue of BPH chondroitin sulfate B and hyaluronic acid was present in the interstitium and hyaluronic acid was present in the cytoplasm of epitherial cells. In the epithelial basement membrane of the tissue from BPH, chondroitin B and hyaluronic acid were present. 1,2-Glycol groups of neutral complex carbohydrates in the interstitium of prostatic cancer were shown to exist in smaller amounts than in that of BPH. In the cytoplasm of cancer cells the intensity of both PO-RCA-DAB and ConA-PO-DAB staining could be divided into three groups: strong, moderate and weak. In the prostatic cancer there was a good correlation between the intensity of PO-RCA-DAB staining and tumor grade, and intensity of ConA-PO-DAB staining was correlated well with serum PAP level. The cytoplasm of cancer cells showed a positive reaction to PAP immunostaining and no appreciable difference was observed according to tumor grade.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:[The histochemistry of complex carbohydrates in the prostatic tumor]. 258 29

Proteoglycans were extracted from articular discs with 4 M guanidinium chloride and separated by ion-exchange and gel-filtration chromatography into high molecular weight (Mr greater than 1,000,000) species containing chondroitin sulphate (predominantly chondroitin 6-sulphate) and low molecular weight iduronic acid-rich dermatan sulphate proteoglycan(s). The chondroitin sulphate proteoglycan contained 21% uronic acid and 17% protein. It gave rise on digestion with chondroitinase ABC to a protein core of apparent Mr 350,000 with an amino acid composition closely resembling that of the cartilage-type proteoglycans. Other characteristics shared with previously-described cartilage proteoglycans include the presence of keratan sulphate and the ability to aggregate with hyaluronic acid.
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PMID:Proteoglycans of the articular disc of the bovine temporomandibular joint. I. High molecular weight chondroitin sulphate proteoglycan. 279 46

Calf and mature cow articular cartilage was labeled in vitro with [35S]SO4 and [3H]glycine and kinetics of incorporation of both isotopes by cartilage fragments was determined by scintillation spectroscopy. The cartilage fragments were then extracted in sequence with 4M GuHCl (Guanidium chloride) and pepsin. The pepsin digest was adjusted to 1.3 M NaCl and pepsin-solubilized collagen salted out. The 4M GuHCl extract, collagen and pepsin-resistent residue were then freeze-dried. The 4M GuHCl extract was further fractionated by DEAE (Diethylaminoethyl) 52 ion exchange chromatography to obtain protein and PG (Proteoglycan) fractions. The protein fraction was also characterised by SDS-PAGE and PG fraction by Sepharose C1-2B chromatography under associative conditions in the presence and absence of an exogenous HA (Hyaluronic acid). The GAG (Glycosaminoglycan) side chains of the PG samples were analysed by Sephadex G-200 column chromatography and their composition determined by paper chromatography after chondroitinase ABC digestion. Linear incorporation of both isotopes was observed from 1 to 18 hours of incubation and roughly equal amounts of [35S]SO4 counts were found on per cell bases in both cartilages although less [3H]glycine was incorporated by cow chondrocytes. It was also found that calf chondrocytes synthesize much greater proportion of the collagen whereas the cow cells synthesize PGs of smaller hydrodynamic sizes, bearing shorter GAG side chains that are enriched in KS (Keratan sulfate) and Ch-6S (Chondroitin-6 sulfate isomer). A failure of cow 35S-PGs monomers to interact with an exogenous HA in the presence of other extracted components was also demonstrated. The relevance of these findings for the mechanism of cartilage damage in aging and osteoarthritis is discussed.
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PMID:Age-related changes in the synthesis of matrix macromolecules by bovine articular cartilage. 280 79


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