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)

The endothelial cell surface receptor thrombomodulin (TM) displays various anticoagulant functions: it acts as a cofactor for the activation of protein C (PC) by thrombin, prevents the activation of fibrinogen, platelets and Factor V by thrombin. TM was also shown to accelerate the inhibition of thrombin by its physiological inhibitor antithrombin III (ATIII). The studies performed on rabbit lung TM were undertaken in order to provide better understanding, along with the identification and the characterization of functional domains, to the mechanism of action of TM. On the basis of the physical and chemical properties of TM, which were compatible with those of a proteoglycan, the presence of a sulfated polysaccharide chain covalently bound to TM, constituting an acidic domain independent of the protein C activation cofactor site, was suggested. Further enzymatic and chemical characterization showed that rabbit TM was in fact a chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan. Monoclonal antibodies raised against rabbit TM and proteins known for their ability to neutralize the activity of heparin, as well as TM submitted to chondroitinase digestion were used in order to identify the role of the different structural domains of TM. Binding of thrombin to TM at a primary site on the protein part is a prerequisite for all the biological activities of TM. However, while this binding is sufficient for TM to promote the activation of PC by thrombin, the inhibition by TM of thrombin-induced fibrinogen clotting and factor V activation requires the interaction of thrombin at a secondary site with the polysaccharide chain of TM. This interaction with the polysaccharide chain (which carries a highly sulfated trisaccharide at the non-reducing terminus) leads to the inhibition of the procoagulant functions of TM-bound thrombin towards fibrinogen and factor V as well as an increased reactivity of the enzyme with ATIII. These results were rationalized in the functional model proposed for the rabbit TM-proteoglycan. An original aspect of the TM-proteoglycan resides in the fact that the chondroitin sulfate side chain brings new anticoagulant activities, in addition to the PC activation cofactor activity, to the molecule. TM is a new type of proteoglycan with important regulatory function in hemostasis, which anticoagulant properties depend on both the protein core and the polysaccharide chain.
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PMID:[Thrombomodulin: a new proteoglycan. Structure-function relation]. 165 16

The isolation and partial characterization of a novel anticoagulant from the plasma of a patient with metastatic prostate cancer is described. The patient had a prolonged activated partial thromboplastic time, prothrombin time and thrombin time which did not correct by mixing with normal plasma. The reptilase time was normal and the prolonged thrombin time was corrected with protamine sulfate suggesting a heparin-like anticoagulant. A glycosaminoglycan anticoagulant (GAC) was isolated from the patient's plasma. The inhibitory activity of the GAC was destroyed by treatment with chondroitinase ABC. The GAC migrated on agarose gel electrophoresis between keratin sulfate and heparan sulfate. Purified GAC possessed only 2% (W/W) of the antithrombin III cofactor activity of porcine heparin. In assays using purified fibrinogen, the GAC was shown to directly inhibit fibrinogen proteolysis by thrombin. It is concluded that this glycosaminoglycan anticoagulant directly inhibits thrombin clotting of fibrinogen and is a new mechanism for abnormal hemostatic assays in cancer.
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PMID:A glycosaminoglycan inhibitor of thrombin: a new mechanism for abnormal hemostatic assays in cancer. 189 11

To investigate mechanisms regulating intra-alveolar coagulation, we studied monolayers of the A549 human lung epithelial cell line. The surface of A549 cells delayed the onset of prothrombin-to-thrombin conversion and prevented total prothrombin consumption in normal plasma compared to plastic cell-free wells. Similar results were achieved with bovine pulmonary endothelial (CPAE) and rat intestinal epithelial (IEC-6) cell lines, whereas Madin-Darby canine kidney renal epithelial cell line accelerated thrombin formation. The A549 surface catalyzed antithrombin III-thrombin complex formation with no significant increase in thrombin inactivation from heparin cofactor II. The A549 cell surface effects were largely, but not completely, reversed to values obtained for plastic when protein C-deficient plasma was used. Pretreatment of the cell surface with chondroitinase ABC plus heparitinase prior to thrombin generation experiments had no effect on the total prothrombin consumed but decreased the initial delay. Heparan sulfate as well as dermatan sulfate and other chondroitin sulfates were detected on the A549 surface using alcian blue staining. Conditioned media from A549, CPAE, and IEC-6 cells delayed the clot time of recalcified plasma. Use of chondroitinase ABC and heparitinase were both required to obliterate the A549 conditioned media activity. After growing A549 cells in 35SO(2-)4-containing medium, the resultant conditioned medium was found to contain 2,000 kD and 300- to 1,000-kD proteoglycans that yielded chains of less than or equal to 100 kD on reductive elimination with base.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:A549 lung epithelial cells synthesize anticoagulant molecules on the cell surface and matrix and in conditioned media. 201

Thrombomodulin (TM), a major anticoagulant protein at the vessel wall, serves as a potent cofactor for the activation of Protein C by thrombin. Previous work has indicated that (rabbit) TM is a proteoglycan that contains a single polysaccharide chain, tentatively identified as a sulphated galactosaminoglycan, and furthermore suggested that this component may be functionally related to additional anticoagulant activities expressed by the TM molecule [Bourin, Ohlin, Lane, Stenflo & Lindahl (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 8044-8052]. Results of the present study establish that (enzymic) removal of the polysaccharide chain abolishes the inhibitory effect of TM on thrombin-induced fibrinogen clotting as well as the promoting effect of TM on the inactivation of thrombin by antithrombin, but does not affect the ability of TM to serve as a cofactor in the activation of Protein C. Studies of yet another biological activity of rabbit TM, namely the ability to prevent the activation of Factor V by thrombin [Esmon, Esmon & Harris (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 7944-7947], confirmed that TM markedly delays the conversion of the native 330 kDa Factor V precursor into polypeptide intermediates, and further into the 96 kDa heavy chain and 71-74 kDa light-chain components of activated Factor Va. In contrast, the activation kinetics of a similar sample of Factor V incubated with thrombin in the presence of chondroitinase ABC-digested TM did not differ from that observed in the absence of TM. It is concluded that the inhibitory effect of TM on Factor V activation also depends on the presence of the polysaccharide component on the TM molecule.
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PMID:Functional role of the polysaccharide component of rabbit thrombomodulin proteoglycan. Effects on inactivation of thrombin by antithrombin, cleavage of fibrinogen by thrombin and thrombin-catalysed activation of factor V. 216 42

We constructed a human soluble thrombomodulin (sTM) expression vector using the RSV promoter. Recombinant sTM (rsTM) was expressed in CHO cells and was recovered from culture medium by ion exchange chromatography. Two active fractions, designated as rsTM alpha (low salt elution) and rsTM beta (high salt elution), were detected and further purified by immunoaffinity chromatography. Purified rsTM beta contained bound chondroitin-4-sulfate as judged by HPLC detection of the chondroitinase ABC and AC I digestion product, 2-acetamido-2-deoxy-3-O-(beta-D-gluco-4-enepyranosyluronic acid)-4-O-sulfo-D-galactose. The apparent Kd values for thrombin of alpha and beta were 7.4 and 1.4 nM respectively. RsTM beta was more effective at inhibition of thrombin clotting activity and had antithrombin III-dependent anticoagulant activity which was not possessed by rsTM alpha. Both anticoagulant activities were lost after chondroitinase treatment of rsTM beta.
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PMID:Presence and function of chondroitin-4-sulfate on recombinant human soluble thrombomodulin. 216 32

Thrombomodulin acts as a cofactor for protein C activation by thrombin (PC activation cofactor activity) and inhibits thrombin-induced fibrinogen clotting (direct anticoagulant activity). In addition, rabbit thrombomodulin has been shown to promote thrombin inactivation by antithrombin (AT-dependent anticoagulant activity). However, a non-acidic form (i.e. non-retarded on ion-exchange chromatography) of thrombomodulin generated by limited proteolysis retained only the PC activation cofactor activity. The acidic form (retarded on ion-exchange chromatography) of thrombomodulin is now shown to prevent the rapid inactivation of thrombin by antithrombin in the presence of heparin, presumably by preventing the formation of the ternary thrombin-AT-heparin complex. This effect was not observed with non-acidic thrombomodulin. When submitted to chondroitinase digestion, thrombomodulin was converted into an essentially non-acidic form that lacked both the AT-dependent and the direct anticoagulant activities but showed a PC activation cofactor function indistinguishable from that of native thrombomodulin. This chondroitinase-digested form did not prevent the catalytic effect of heparin on the inhibition of thrombin by AT. It is concluded that the acidic domain of rabbit thrombomodulin, a chondroitin (dermatan) sulfate glycosaminoglycan, interacts with a site of the thrombin molecule that is not involved in the protein C activation cofactor function, but is essential to the cleavage of fibrinogen or binding of heparin.
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PMID:Effect of rabbit thrombomodulin on thrombin inhibition by antithrombin in the presence of heparin. 254 98

We have analyzed the binding of thrombin, a serine protease with central roles in hemostasis, to the subendothelial extracellular matrix (ECM) produced by cultured endothelial cells. This substrate provides a thrombogenic surface where hemostasis is initiated. Binding was saturable and equilibrium was achieved after 3 h incubation with 125I-alpha-thrombin. Scatchard analysis of thrombin binding revealed the presence of 5.1 X 10(9) binding sites per squared millimeter ECM, with an apparent Kd of 13 nM. The catalytically blocked enzyme, diisofluorophosphate (DIP)-alpha-thrombin competed efficiently with 125I-alpha-thrombin, indicating that the binding was independent of its catalytic site. Moreover, high concentrations of the synthetic tetradecapeptide, representing residues 367-380 of thrombin B chain (the macrophage mitogenic domain of thrombin), competed with thrombin binding to ECM, indicating that the binding site may reside in the vicinity of "loop B" region. Thrombin binds to dermatan sulfate in the ECM, as demonstrated by the inhibition of 125I-alpha-thrombin binding to ECM pretreated with chondroitinase ABC, but not with heparitinase or chondroitinase AC. This stands in contrast to 125I-FGF (fibroblast growth factor) binding to ECM, which was inhibited by heparitinase but not by chondroitinase ABC, ECM-bound thrombin exhibits an exposed proteolytic site as monitored by the Chromozyme TH assay and by its ability to convert fibrinogen to a fibrin clot and to induce platelet activation as indicated by 14C-serotonin release. ECM-bound thrombin failed to form a complex with its major circulating inhibitor-antithrombin III (AT III), compared with rapid complex formation with soluble thrombin. We propose that thrombin binds to subendothelial ECM where it remains functionally active, localized, and protected from inactivation by circulating inhibitors.
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PMID:Binding of thrombin to subendothelial extracellular matrix. Protection and expression of functional properties. 279 47

A complex coagulopathy appeared in three women receiving suramin as treatment for metastatic adrenocortical carcinoma. Although hepatocellular dysfunction accounted for some of the abnormality, a unique feature of the coagulopathy was the presence of an inhibitor of the thrombin clotting time. The potency of this circulating anticoagulant increased markedly during exacerbations of hepatic injury. The anticoagulant was removed from plasma samples from two of the patients by passage over a column of diethylaminoethyl (DEAE)-Sephacel. It eluted from the DEAE at salt concentrations that removed "high-charge" glycosaminoglycans. Elimination of the purified anticoagulant activity in vitro required a combination of heparitinase and chondroitinase ABC, suggesting that the activity was mediated by both heparan sulfate and dermatan sulfate. Suramin is hypothesized to inhibit enzymes that normally degrade glycosaminoglycans, resulting in accumulation of these substances, which are released from the liver into the circulation during periods of hepatic injury.
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PMID:Circulating glycosaminoglycan anticoagulants associated with suramin treatment. 333 95

Inhibition of thrombin by heparin cofactor II (HCII) is accelerated by dermatan sulfate, heparan sulfate, and heparin. Purified HCII or defibrinated plasma was incubated with washed confluent cell monolayers, 125I-thrombin was added, and the rate of formation of covalent 125I-thrombin-inhibitor complexes was determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and autoradiography. Fibroblasts and porcine aortic smooth muscle cells accelerated inhibition of thrombin by HCII 2.3-7.5-fold but had no effect on other thrombin inhibitors in plasma. Human umbilical vein endothelial cells and mouse macrophage-derived cells did not accelerate the thrombin-HCII reaction. IMR-90 normal human fetal lung fibroblasts treated with heparinase or heparitinase accelerated the thrombin-HCII reaction to the same degree as untreated cells. In contrast, treatment with chondroitinase ABC almost totally abolished the ability of these cells to activate HCII while chondroitinase AC had little or no effect, suggesting that dermatan sulfate was responsible for the activity observed. [35S]Sulfate-labeled proteoglycans were isolated from IMR-90 fibroblast monolayers and conditioned medium and fractionated into two peaks on Sepharose CL-2B. The lower Mr proteoglycans contained 74-76% dermatan sulfate and were 11-25 times more active with HCII than the higher Mr proteoglycans which contained 68-97% heparan sulfate. The activity of the lower Mr proteoglycans decreased 70-90% by degradation of the dermatan sulfate component with chondroitinase ABC. These results confirm that dermatan sulfate proteoglycans are primarily responsible for activation of HCII by IMR-90 fibroblasts. We suggest that HCII may inhibit thrombin when plasma is exposed to vascular smooth muscle cells or fibroblasts.
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PMID:Activation of heparin cofactor II by fibroblasts and vascular smooth muscle cells. 379 24

Polysaccharide was isolated from human spleen mastocytoma by proteolytic digestion, precipitation with cetylpyridinium chloride, digestion with chondroitinase ABC, and ion-exchange chromatography on DEAE-cellulose. The final product (0.7 mg per g of starting material, MW 8000) behaved like standard heparin on ion-exchange chromatography and on electrophoresis, and contained D-glucuronic acid, L-iduronic acid, D-glucosamine and sulfate in the proportions expected for heparin. Affinity chromatography on antithrombin-Sepharose separated a distinct high-affinity fraction (4-5% of the total material). Structural analysis of this fraction showed that about 10% of the D-glucosamine residues were N-acetylated, the remainder N-sulfated. The anticoagulant activity of the isolated heparin was 71 B.P. units per mg (whole-blood system), or 30 units per mg (anti-thrombin and chromogenic substrate). 205 and 10-15 units per mg (chromogenic assay) were found for high and low affinity fractions, respectively. These results demonstrate conclusively the occurrence of heparin in a human tissue.
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PMID:Isolation and characterization of heparin from human mastocytoma tissue. 678 Oct 95


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