Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:4.2.2.7 (heparinase)
1,270 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Recent studies have identified the Alzheimer's disease amyloid beta/A4 protein precursor (APP) as a trophic and/or tropic protein on several types of cells, including fibroblasts, primary culture neurons, PC12 cells, and B103 neuron-like cells. Many trophic proteins bind heparin, and it is believed that the heparin-binding domain is crucial for the trophic activity of these proteins. APP also binds heparin. The current studies were undertaken to examine the hypothesis that the neuritotropic activity of APP requires heparin binding. It was found that APP produced in E. coli bound B103 cells through detergent-extractable molecules. Approximately 50% of the binding sites were heparinase-sensitive, and heparin and heparan sulfate competed for APP binding to these sites. The heparinase-insensitive sites were recognized by a stretch of 17 amino acids of APP (residues 319-335) that contains the neuritotropic activity of APP. A mutant APP with a deletion at this site was capable of binding to the heparinase-sensitive sites, although this molecule was not neuritotropic to B103 neuron-like cells. Therefore, the neuritotropic site and the heparin-binding site are distinct in APP, and the neuritotropic effect of APP is produced through its binding to detergent-extractable and heparinase-insensitive sites.
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PMID:Secreted form of amyloid beta/A4 protein precursor (APP) binds to two distinct APP binding sites on rat B103 neuron-like cells through two different domains, but only one site is involved in neuritotropic activity. 791 87

Serum amyloid P component (SAP) is associated with amyloid beta (A beta) deposition in Alzheimer disease (AD). Since SAP is exclusively synthesized by peripheral organs, its presence in the brain of AD suggests impairment of the blood-brain barrier (BBB). We studied the association of SAP with A beta deposits in a transgenic mouse model overexpressing beta-protein precursor (betaPP). Both SAP and another extracellular matrix binding protein, basic fibroblastic growth factor bind to the heparinase sensitive sites of A beta deposits in this model. However, no endogenous SAP immunoreactivity was found in the transgenic mouse brain. These results suggest that SAP is not required for A beta deposition, and that this mouse model does not develop the same BBB abnormalities as those seen in AD.
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PMID:Serum amyloid P is not present in amyloid beta deposits of a transgenic animal model. 1057 65