Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.2.1.36 (hyaluronidase)
4,606 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

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

Fixation and staining procedures were developed for the electron microscopic demonstration of glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) in human epidermis. En bloc staining with cuprolinic blue (CB), ruthenium red (RR) and tannic acid (TA) in the primary fixative were applied for the localization of the GAGs. Removal of the epidermal basal lamina and underlying dermis was a prerequisite for stain penetration. In CB-fixed specimens 50 nm long, rod-like granules were found attached to keratinocyte cell surfaces, while the RR- and TA-fixed specimens contained round granules (luminal diameter 10 and 30 nm, respectively). The stainability of the CB-positive granules in the presence of 0.3 mol/l MgCl2 indicated that they contained sulphated GAGs. Prefixation digestions of epidermal sheets with chondroitinase ABC. Streptomyces hyaluronidase, and heparitinase showed that the RR-positive granules also contained sulphated GAGs, mostly heparan sulphate. The granules visualized with TA on keratinocytes were susceptible to heparitinase treatment, but the abundance of TA-staining suggested that TA also stained structures other than heparan sulphate. The EM data was in accordance with the 35SO4 labelling experiments showing that heparan sulphate was the major sulphated GAG synthesized in epidermis, whereas chondroitin/dermatan sulphates comprised about one fifth of the total activity incorporated. The distributions of the CB-, RR- and TA-positive granules on cell surfaces were similar. The morphology of the proteoglycan granules was probably determined by the extent of the GAG-chain collapse following binding to each of the dyes.
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PMID:Ultrastructural localization of keratinocyte surface associated heparan sulphate proteoglycans in human epidermis. 244 72

Hyaluronate is actively synthesized by cultured epidermis and dermis, but no direct histological data have been available about its localization in normal human skin. A hyaluronate-specific biotinylated probe, prepared from the hyaluronate binding region of cartilage proteoglycan, was applied to human skin sections and visualized using the biotin-avidin-peroxidase system. The specificity of this staining was confirmed by hyaluronidase predigestion and by hyaluronate-derived oligosaccharides added to the staining solution. All dermis showed diffuse binding of the probe, but the highest staining intensity was observed in the epidermal intercellular spaces. The stainability extended from basal cells to the middle layers of the epidermis, whereas the granular layer and stratum corneum were completely negative. Also, the basal side of basal cells (basement membrane) did not bind the hyaluronate probe. The abundance of hyaluronate on surfaces and intercellular spaces of the spinous cells is suggested to have an important role in the physiology of human epidermis.
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PMID:Localization of epidermal hyaluronic acid using the hyaluronate binding region of cartilage proteoglycan as a specific probe. 245 Jan 49

Cuprolinic Blue, when applied at a critical electrolyte concentration, can be utilized for assessing the localization and structural characteristics of proteoglycans with electron microscopy. We have used this cytochemical procedure to evaluate the distribution of proteoglycan in the interphotoreceptor matrix of the mouse retina. Cuprolinic Blue-positive filaments of two distinct morphological types were present surrounding both rod and cone photoreceptors. Large filaments, 115-135 nm long and 15-25 nm in diameter, were distributed in the interphotoreceptor matrix around the outer segment and outer portion of the inner segment. These filaments appeared linked to each other to form a complex meshwork. Smaller filaments, 60-70 nm long and 5-10 nm in diameter, were principally observed around the photoreceptor inner segments. Incubation of retinas with chondroitinase AC and chondroitinase ABC eliminated Cuprolinic Blue staining of both large and small filaments, whereas hyaluronidase treatment reduced the size of the filaments but did not eliminate their staining. When retinas were washed extensively prior to fixation and staining, Cuprolinic Blue-positive filaments remained associated with the photoreceptor cell surface. These results suggest that the interphotoreceptor matrix of the mouse retina contains at least two structural types of proteoglycan, of the chondroitin sulfate-type, which are differentially distributed in this compartment. One of the proteoglycans forms a complex meshwork which surrounds the photoreceptors. Both are insoluble and appear to be firmly attached to the photoreceptor plasma membrane.
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PMID:Proteoglycans in the mouse interphotoreceptor matrix. I. Histochemical studies using cuprolinic blue. 245 35

The association of hyaluronate with the surface of chondrocytes was examined by several approaches using primary cultures of chondrocytes derived from the Swarm rat chondrosarcoma. In culture, chondrosarcoma chondrocytes produced large pericellular coats, which can be visualized by particle exclusion, and which can be removed by Streptomyces hyaluronidase. Exposure of chondrocytes, which had been metabolically labelled with 3H-acetate, to exogenous hyaluronate or to Streptomyces hyaluronidase resulted in the release of 36-38% of the endogenous, labelled chondroitin sulfate from the cell layer into the incubation solution. These results imply that at least 37% of the cell layer chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan is retained there by an interaction with hyaluronate. Thus membranes were prepared from cultured chondrocytes and examined for sites which bind 3H-hyaluronate. Binding was observed and found to be saturable, specific for hyaluronate, of high affinity (Kd = approximately 10(-10) M), and destroyed by treating the membranes with trypsin. The 3H-hyaluronate-binding activity was inhibited competitively by hyaluronate decasaccharides but not by hexasaccharides or octasaccharides, indicating that the binding sites recognize a sequence of hyaluronate composed of five disaccharide repeats. The binding activity was partially purified from a detergent extract of chondrocyte membranes by ion exchange chromatography on DEAE-cellulose, followed by affinity chromatography on wheat germ agglutinin-agarose. Analysis of the partially purified binding activity by SDS-PAGE revealed five protein bands of 48,000-66,000 daltons in silver-stained gels. SDS-PAGE followed by Western blotting and exposure to monoclonal antibodies which recognize epitopes present in link protein and in the hyaluronate-binding region of cartilage proteoglycan revealed no immunoreactive protein bands in the partially purified material. We conclude that one mechanism by which hyaluronate associates with the chondrocyte surface may be via interaction with a membrane-bound hyaluronate-binding protein which is distinct from link protein and proteoglycan.
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PMID:Membrane-associated hyaluronate-binding activity of chondrosarcoma chondrocytes. 247 51

This paper makes three points about how the chick corneal epithelium lays down the primary stroma, an orthogonally arranged array of well-spaced, 20-nm-diameter collagen fibrils. (1) Isolated corneal epithelia will, when cultured, lay down de novo stromas whose fibril-diameter distribution, fibril spacing, and proteoglycan profile are similar to those laid down in vivo. They differ from embryonic stromas in two ways: first, much of the chondroitin sulfate is released to the medium and, second, there is a relatively small amount of orthogonal organization. Epithelia seem only to lay down such stromas if they are separated from their original stromas with dispase, which leaves an intact basal lamina, and spread out, basal lamina downward, on a Nuclepore filter (poresize, 0.1 micron). (2) Chondroitin sulfate (CS), the predominant proteoglycan (greater than 85%), seems to play no significant role in collagen fibrillogenesis in vitro. Stromas laid down in its absence were indistinguishable from controls as assayed by fibril diameter, organization, and spacing and the amount of collagen synthesized. For these experiments, epithelia were cultured in the presence of hyaluronidase, which degrades CS, and p-nitrophenyl beta-D-xyloside, which inhibits the formation of links between the core protein and glycosaminoglycan side chains in the PG; the absence of intact CS was confirmed by gel filtration. We suggest that, in vivo, CS may facilitate the interfibrillar movement that takes place as the cornea grows. We have also found that keratinase, which degrades the very small amount of keratan sulfate present in the primary stroma, has no effect on stromal deposition. (3) There are substantial amounts of unidentified matrix components in primary stromas laid down both in vivo and in vitro. This conclusion was drawn from SEM observations on both types of stroma after they had been freeze-dried, a process which does not condense hydrated macromolecules. Even after being treated with hyaluronidase to remove the CS, substantial amounts of interfibrillar matrix were still present. Until these components are identified and their interactions with collagen are understood, the mechanisms responsible for stromal morphogenesis are unlikely to be understood.
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PMID:Does chondroitin sulfate have a role to play in the morphogenesis of the chick primary corneal stroma? 249 96

Primary cultures of rabbit articular chondrocytes have been maintained for 10 days and labeled with [35S]sulfate, [3H]leucine, and [35S]cysteine in pulse-chase protocols to study the structure and hyaluronate binding properties of newly synthesized proteoglycan monomers. Radiolabeled monomers were purified from medium and cell-layer fractions by dissociative CsCl gradient centrifugation with bovine carrier monomer, and analyzed for hyaluronate binding affinity on Sepharose CL-2B in 0.5 M Na acetate, 0.1% Triton X-100, pH 6.8. Detergent was necessary to prevent self-association of newly synthesized monomers during chromatography. Monomers secreted during a 30-min pulse labeling with [35S]sulfate had a low affinity relative to carrier. Those molecules released into the medium during the first 12 h of chase (about 40% of the total) remained in the low affinity form whereas those retained by the cell layer rapidly acquired high affinity. In cultures where more than 90% of the preformed cell-layer proteoglycan was removed by hyaluronidase digestion before radiolabeling the newly synthesized low affinity monomers also rapidly acquired high affinity if retained in the cell layer. Cultures labeled with amino acid precursors were used to establish the purity of monomer preparations and to isolate core proteins for study. Leucine- or cysteine-labeled core proteins derived from either low or high affinity monomer preparations migrated as a single major species on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis with electrophoretic mobility very similar to that of core protein derived from extracted proteoglycan monomer. Purified low affinity monomers were converted to the high affinity form by treatment at pH 8.6; however, this change was prevented by guanidinium-HCl at concentrations above 0.8 M. Conversion to high affinity was also achieved by incubation of monomers in aggregate with hyaluronic acid (HA) at pH 6.8 followed by dissociative reisolation of monomer. At both pH 6.8 and 8.6 the conversion process was slow, requiring up to 48 h for the maximum increase in affinity. It is suggested that the slow increase in HA binding affinity seen during extracellular processing of proteoglycans in cartilage and chondrocyte cultures is the result of an irreversible structural change in the HA binding domain following the binding of monomer to hyaluronate. The available evidence suggests that this change involves the formation or rearrangement of disulfide bonds.
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PMID:Studies on the hyaluronate binding properties of newly synthesized proteoglycans purified from articular chondrocyte cultures. 249 59

Hyaluronate synthetase was solubilized with digitonin from crude membranes of mouse oligodendroglioma cells. Detergent extraction was carried out in 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazineethanesulfonic acid-buffered saline with an optimal digitonin to protein ratio (w/w) of 0.7-0.8. The solubilized synthetase was partially purified approximately 230-fold by gel filtration and ion-exchange chromatography. The solubilized enzyme displayed similar properties to membrane-bound enzyme: (a) it synthesized high molecular weight hyaluronate which eluted in the void volume of a Sepharose CL-2B column; (b) the apparent Km values obtained for UDP-GlcUA and UDP-GlcNAc were 50 and 100 microM, respectively; and (c) treatment of intact cells with hyaluronidase prior to extraction with digitonin resulted in a 3-fold increase in solubilized synthetase activity. Furthermore, gel filtration chromatography of the solubilized hyaluronidase-treated synthetase complex showed that it was smaller than the solubilized untreated synthetase complex, due to shorter nascent-bound hyaluronate. The solubilized synthetase was shown to be associated with hyaluronate in the form of a complex. Both hyaluronidase-treated and -untreated synthetase-hyaluronate complexes after solubilization were adsorbed by an affinity matrix using the hyaluronate binding domain of rat chondrosarcoma proteoglycan as ligand. This solubilized active enzyme preparation should allow the identification and characterization of the components of the hyaluronate-synthetase complex.
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PMID:Solubilization and partial purification of hyaluronate synthetase from oligodendroglioma cells. 250 Dec 97

We have shown that pepsin 1 can be prepared in milligram quantities from human gastric juice by semi-preparative high-performance ion-exchange chromatography. Further investigation into the elution of this enzyme using linear chloride gradients have shown it to be a heterogeneous mixture, the components of which all have peptic activity, but differing specific activities. These components are changed in number and retention time by incubation with hyaluronidase and aryl sulphatase, but not by neuraminidase or acid phosphatase, implying the presence of a sulphated proteoglycan.
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PMID:Heterogeneity of human pepsin 1, as shown by high-performance ion-exchange chromatography. 250 11

Three types (T1, T2, T3) of proteoglycan (PG) filaments, as demonstrated by cuprolinic blue (CB) under critical electrolyte concentration method in the epithelial-stromal interface of the guinea pig lateral prostate, were characterized cytochemically by using a number of glycosaminoglycan(GAG)-degrading enzymes and nitrous acid. The results showed that T1 filaments located in basement membranes of the epithelium, endothelium, and smooth muscle cells, were removed by nitrous acid, heparitinase, and pronase but resistant to chondroitinase (Ch)-ABC and Ch-AC, heparinase, neuraminidase, and Streptomyces (S) hyaluronidase. The T1 filaments, therefore, contain heparan sulfate. The T2 filaments closely linked to collagen fibrils were removed by Ch-ABC, Ch-ABC plus S-hyaluronidase, and pronase but were resistant to nitrous acid, heparitinase, heparinase, neuraminidase, and S-hyaluronidase. These show that T2 filaments are rich in dermatan sulfate. The T3 filaments in the interstitial spaces and on the surface of fibroblasts were removed by Ch-ABC, Ch-AC, and pronase but were resistant to heparitinase, heparinase, hyaluronidase, neuraminidase, and nitrous acid. They are, therefore, rich in chondroitin sulfate.
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PMID:Cytochemical characterization of cuprolinic blue-stained proteoglycans in the epithelial-stromal interface of the guinea pig lateral prostate. 271 Jun 91


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