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

Histochemical localization of the estrogen-induced sulfated glycoproteins was made in the estrogen-treated rabbit uterus. Biochemical studies by a group of Endo et al, affirmed these particular glycoproteins were PAS-positive and metachromatic as stained with TB. No sign of digestion, however, has been detected in a series of tests with alpha-amylase, testicular hyaluronidase, streptomyces hyaluronidase, chondroitinase AC and chondroitinase ABC, and heparinase. The apical portions of the epithelial and glandular cells, obviously expanded by the estrogen treatment, display strong beta-metachromasia with TB (pH 4.0), saliva-resistant PAS-positive reactions, and also alcianophilia with AB (pH 2.5). These reactions are not reduced after the treatment with the enzymes above-mentioned. Meanwhile, in the stromal matrix, the same enzymes give an influence to diminish the reactions to various extent. Our results suggest that the estrogen-induced sulfated glycoprotein is definitely localized in the apical portions of the epithelial and glandular cells. The identity is emphasized between the substance that is elucidated in the histochemical sections and the sulfated glycoproteins that have been specified solely by means of biochemical assays.
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PMID:Histochemical localization of estrogen induced sulfated glycoprotein in rabbit uterus. 5 8

Uterine slices obtained from the estrogen-treated rabbits were digested with pronase. Glycosaminoglycans and acidic glycopeptides were then isolated by Dowex 1 column chromatography and preparative electrophoresis on cellulose acetate membrane (Separax), in succession. Each subfraction thus obtained was identified by the mobility on Separax electrophoresis and the digestibility with mucopolysaccharidases (Streptomyces hyaluronidase, testicular hyaluronidase, chondroitinase AC, chondroitinase ABC and heparinase). The resulting data showed that each complex saccharide (hyaluronic acid, heparan sulfate, chondroitin sulfate A, chondroitin sulfate C, dermatan sulfate, sulfated glycopeptide and sialoglycopeptide) was separated into 2-5 fractions, indicating charge and/or molecular heterogeneity of each complex saccharide.
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PMID:Glycosaminoglycans and acidic glycoproteins in rabbit uterus under estrogenic conditions. 12

The changes in levels of glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) of the intima and media of the human artery in atherosclerosis were determined by a recently introduced two-dimensional electrophoresis technique that permits direct measurments of each of these macromolecules. To identify the arterial GAGs, they were fractionated by chromatography on a DEAE-Sephadex A-25 column, and the resulting three fractions (hyaluronic acid [HA], heparan sulfate [HS], and the partially separated chondroitin sulfates B [CSB] and C [CSC]) were analyzed for their electrophoretic mobilities by this electrophoretic method, for their digestability by highly specific hydrolases (leech hyaluronidase, heparinase, and chondroitinases ABC and AC) and for their iduronic acid content. From these studies we concluded that normal and atherosclerotic human aortas contain CSB, CSC, HA, and HS. Further, we demonstrated that CSB is a hybrid consisting of approximately 40% CSA and 60% CSB and that CSC appears to be a polymer consisting essentially of glucuronic acid and N-acetylgalactosamine-6-sulfate. Classical CSA as well as chondroitin (CH) were not present in detectable amounts. In the relatively normal intima, the mean concentrations of the GAGs were found to be 4.7, 20.9, 1.3, and 5.1 mg/g of dry, defatted, decalcified tissue for CSB, CSC, HA, and HS, respectively. With the progression of atherosclerosis, there was a pronounced decrease in the total GAG content (from 32 to 18 mg) associated with a decrease in the CSC and HS levels but without a change in the HA concentrations. Of particular interest, however, was the increase in the CSB level. In the media whose total GAG content averaged approximately 20 mg, no significant changes in these GAG levels were noted with the progression of the disease except for that of CSC. These findings may be important in explaining the increased lipoprotein and collagen deposition in the diseased aorta.
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PMID:The glycosaminoglycans of the human artery and their changes in atherosclerosis. 13 44

The glomerular basement membrane was subjected to digestion with specific enzymes to determine the chemical nature (sialoglycoproteins, collagenous peptides, or glycosaminoglycans) of the anionic sites previously demonstrated in the laminae rarae. Enzyme digestion was carried out both in situ and in vitro. Kidneys were perfused in situ with enzyme solutions followed by perfusion with fixative containing the cationic dye, ruthenium red, to detect the anionic sites. Glomerular basement membranes were isolated by detergent treatment of glomeruli and incubated with enzyme solutions, followed by incubation with cationized ferritin (pI 7.3-7.5) to label the anionic sites. Only highly purified enzymes free of proteolytic activity were used. The findings were the same both in situ and in vitro. The anionic sites were unaffected by treatment with neuraminidase, chondroitinase ABC, and testicular or leech hyaluronidase. However, they could no longer be demonstrated after digestion with crude heparinase, purified heparitinase, or Pronase or after nitrous acid oxidation. The results demonstrate that the sites contain heparan sulfate since they are removed by treatment with heparitinase and by nitrous acid oxidation-procedures specific for heparan sulfate; and that sialoglycoproteins or other glycosaminoglycans do not represent major components of these sites since the latter are not affected by digestion with neuraminidase and other glycosaminoglycan-specific enzymes. Identical findings were obtained on basement membranes in other locations (Bowman's capsule, tubule epithelium, and endothelium of peritubular capillaries). The presence of heparan sulfate in the glomerular basement membrane is discussed in relation to the charge-selective properties of the glomerular filter and in relation to its potential involvement in various types of glomerular injury.
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PMID:Presence of heparan sulfate in the glomerular basement membrane. 15 19

Glycosaminoglycans were isolated from purified fractions of glomerular basement membranes and partially characterized by chemical analysis and cellulose acetate electrophoresis. Basement membranes were prepared by detergent treatment of rat glomeruli and subjected to digestion with papain and Pronase. Glycosaminoglycans were isolated from the digests by precipitation with cetyl pyridinium chloride and ethanol. Results of cellulose acetate electrophoresis of the isolated glycosaminoglycan fraction revealed the presence of one major and one minor spot. The major spot was identified as heparan sulfate because it comigrated with the heparan sulfate standard and was sensitive to heparinase and to nitrous acid oxidation but insensitive to chondroitinase ABC and to testicular or leech hyaluronidase. The minor spot was tentatively identified as hyaluronic acid based on its migratory behavior and sensitivity to leech and testicular hyaluronidase. The chemical composition of the isolated glycosaminoglycan was typical of that of heparan sulfate (high carbazole/orcinol ratio, high sulfate content, absence of galactosamine). The data support and confirm the cytochemical data obtained previously [Kanwar, Y. S. & Farquhar, M. G. (1979) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 76, 1303-1307] demonstrating that heparan sulfate is the only sulfated glycosaminoglycan detectable in the glomerular basement membrane. The present results suggest that in addition to sulfated glycosaminoglycan some nonsulfated glycosaminoglycan (hyaluronic acid) may also be present in the glomerular basement membrane.
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PMID:Isolation of glycosaminoglycans (heparan sulfate) from glomerular basement membranes. 15 57

A rapid and sensitive papper electrophoretic assay for 35SO4-containing compounds was developed which allowed measurement of 35S-acid mucopolysaccharides synthesized by skin fibroblasts grown in the presence of inorganic 35S-sulfate. Fibroblasts from a skin explant of a patient with I-cell disease when grown in culture accumulated abnormal amounts of 35S-acid mucopolysaccharides and other, as yet unidentified, 35S-labeled compounds. Approximately 75% of the 35S-compounds accumulated by I-cell fibroblasts were not metabolized and remained in the cells after transfer to nonlabeled medium. I-cell fibroblasts differ from fibroblasts derived from classical mucopolysaccharidoses such as Hurler's and Hunter's syndromes in the amount and types of 35S-labeled acid mucopolysaccharides accumulated. I-cell fibroblasts accumulated chondroitin 4- and 6-sulfates (16 per cent), dermatan sulfate (32 per cent), heparan sulfate (32 per cent), and other unidentified 35S-compounds. The unidentified fraction was not hydrolyzed by microbial chondroitinase or heparinase. Attempts to correct the defect in I-cell fibroblasts by growth in the presence of extracts of normal cells resulted in release of only 10 per cent of the accumulated mucopolysaccharides. Under the same conditions, Hurler and Hunter fibroblasts lost over 90 per cent of accumulated mucopolysaccharides.
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PMID:Accumulation of sulfate-containing acid mucopolysaccharides in I-cell fibroblasts. 17 Mar 49

Glycosaminoglycans have been characterized from a normal human breast cell line (HBL-100) and two different cell lines from human breast carcinoma (MDA-MB-231 and MCF-7). The glycosaminoglycans were labeled by exposure of cell cultures to [3H]glucosamine and [35S]sulfate and then isolated from both spent media and cells by pronase digestion and cetylpyridinium chloride fractionation. They were further characterized by (a) hexosamine composition, (b) controlled-pore glass exclusion chromatography, (c) reactivity with specific enzymes (hyaluronidase chondroitinase, heparitinase, and heparinase), (d) nitrous acid degradation, and (e) DEAD-Sephadex chromatography. The results indicate that the HBL-100 line synthesizes mainly hyaluronic acid, most of which is secreted into the medium. Chondroitin sulfate and heparan sulfate are the predominant glycosaminoglycans synthesized by the cancer lines; both are found mainly in the spent medium, but the hyaluronic acid synthesized by the MDA-MB-231 line remains cell associated. The cell-associated heparan sulfate had a molecular weight in excess of 13,000 and may contain linkages susceptible to testicular hyaluronidase. The MCF-7 cells produce significantly lower amounts of glycosaminoglycans than do the other two lines.
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PMID:Glycosaminoglycans of normal and malignant cultured human mammary cells. 42 76

Micro-scale isolation of sulfated glycopeptide from tissue was achieved by successive application of pronase digestion (Step 1), cetylpyridinium chloride-fractionation (Step 2), crude heparinase digestion or chondroitinase ABC digestion plus nitrous acid treatment (Step 3) and preparative cellulose acetate membrane-electrophoresis (Step 4). By this method, sulfated glycopeptide was obtained in a high yield from estrogen-treated rabbit uterus.
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PMID:A method for micro-scale isolation of sulfated glycopeptide from tissue. 52 51

Acidic glycoconjugates (glycosaminoglycans and glycoprotein) were obtained, from myometrium of ovariectomized rabbit under estrogenic condition, by pronase digestion, fractionation with cetylpyridinium chloride and Dowex I column chromatography, in succession. Composition of acidic glycoconjugates was determined enzymatically, employing Streptomyces hyaluronidase, chondroitinase AC II, chondroitinase ABC and crude heparinase. Each glycoconjugate was distributed in 3 approximately 8 fractions obtained by Dowex I column chromatography, indicating its charge and/or molecular heterogeneity. Acidic glycoconjugates consisted of hyaluronic acid (13.4%), chondroitin sulfates A plus C (39.4%), dermatan sulfate (24.6%), heparan sulfate (18.7%) and acidic glycoprotein (most probably sialoglycoprotein) (3.9%). Composition of acidic glycoconjugates in myometrium differed remarkably from that in whole uterus. Myometrium was abundant in chondroitin sulfate isomers (chondroitin sulfates A plus C plus dermatan sulfate), but lacked sulfated glycoprotein. The present results suggested that myometrium and endometrium of uterus may play quite different roles in reproduction.
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PMID:Composition of acidic glycoconjugates (glycosaminoglycans and glycoprotein) in myometrium of rabbit uterus under estrogenic condition. 71 60

The proteoglycans (PGs) in the guinea pig seminal vesicle were demonstrated ultrastructurally by both cuprolinic blue (CB) and ruthenium red (RR) staining. The PGs appeared as electron-dense granules with RR, but were filamentous following CB staining using the critical electrolyte concentration method. Three major types of PGs (T1, T2, T3) have been described according to their different locations and sizes. T1 filaments were short and were found mostly on both sides of the lamina densa of the basal lamina of the glandular epithelium (40-60 nm long) and also on the basal laminae of smooth muscle cells and capillary endothelial cells (20-30 nm long). In the epithelial basal lamina they were regularly spaced at an interval of 40-60 nm. T1 filaments in the lamina densa were smaller and more randomly distributed. Cytochemical characterisation of these PGs by various GAG degrading enzymes showed that T1 PGs are rich in heparan sulphate. T2 filaments were 30-40 nm long and closely associated with the collagen fibrils. They were arranged perpendicular to the long axis of collagen fibrils, also at intervals of about 60 nm. T2 filaments were removed by chondroitinase (Ch)-ABC, Ch-ABC plus Streptomyces (S)-hyaluronidase and pronase, but resistant to nitrous acid, heparitinase, heparinase, neuraminidase and S-hyaluronidase. These show that T2 filaments are rich in dermatan sulphate. T3 filaments (60-100 nm) were widely distributed in the stroma at sites such as the interstitial spaces of the lamina propria, the reticular layer below the basal lamina, around individual collagen fibrils or bundles of such fibres, and on the cell surfaces of fibroblasts. The T3 filaments were removed by Ch-ABC, Ch-AC and pronase but were resistant to heparitinase, heparinase, S-hyaluronidase, neuraminidase and nitrous acid. They are therefore rich in chondroitin sulphate.
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PMID:Cytochemical localisation and characterisation of proteoglycans (glycosaminoglycans) in the epithelial-stromal interface of the seminal vesicle of the guinea pig. 128 Jun 36


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