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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)
Heparin as measured by azure A metachromasia and anticoagulant activity has been extracted with 1 M NaCl from (35)S-labeled human lung fragments or dispersed human lung cells enriched for mast cells. The (35)S-labeled metachromatic material in the 3 M NaCl eluate from Dowex-1 chromatography of the extract from lung fragments exhibited an average mol wt of 20,000 by Sepharose 4B gel filtration. The (35)S-labeled metachromatic material with the charge characteristics of commercial porcine heparin on DEAE cellulose chromatography was entirely heparin by the criteria of resistance to degradation by
chondroitin ABC lyase
and complete degradation by purified
heparinase
. Antithrombin affinity chromatography of purified heparin with an anticoagulant activity of 137 U/mg, revealed that the one-third that was bound and eluted had a 273 U/mg sp act, whereas the unbound activity was 31 U/mg. Thus, the previously observed heterogeneity of commercial porcine heparin for binding to human antithrombin was also observed with human heparin. The mast cell-enriched human lung cell preparations yielded [(35)S]mucopolysaccharides with an average mol wt of 60,000 by Sepharose 4B gel filtration. Approximately 30% of this fraction was degraded by
chondroitin ABC lyase
, and the residual 70% was degraded by purified
heparinase
. When the
chondroitin ABC lyase
-resistant fraction was subjected to alkali degradation the average mol wt was reduced to 20,000. The calculated human lung mast cell heparin content of 2.4-7.8 mug/10(6) cells gave a ratio to histamine on a weight basis similar to that of intact lung fragments, thereby implying that heparin in the lung fragments was largely restricted to the mast cells.
...
PMID:Isolation and characterization of heparin from human lung. 50 Aug 22
In this paper we show that an anticoagulant activity, which we measure by thrombin time, appears in human plasma after its exhaustive proteolytic digestion. This activity is extremely heat stable, it is resistant to
chondroitin ABC lyase
(E.C.4.2.2.4) and heparan sulfate lyase (E.C.4.2.2.8), it is sensitive to
heparin lyase
(E.C.4.2.2.7) and to nitrous acid treatment: we suggest that it can be identified as authentic heparin. The amount present in 1 ml of plasma of healthy subjects corresponds to 0.1-0.2 I.U. of standard heparin (150 I.U./mg). Proteolytically digested human plasma was submitted to ion-exchange chromatography on DEAE-Sephacel and the anticoagulant activity in the fractions eluted at the different molarities of NaCl was measured by thrombin time. This analysis shows that the anticoagulant activity elutes at very low ionic strength. The possibility that interactions of the endogenous heparin with proteins or protein fragments are responsible for the difficulty in isolating heparin from human plasma is discussed.
...
PMID:Endogenous heparinase-sensitive anticoagulant activity in human plasma. 144 May 19
A very high molecular weight mucin-like glycoprotein was isolated by gel filtration of interphotoreceptor matrix (IPM) from fresh bovine eyes and purified to apparent homogeneity by cesium chloride/guanidine hydrochloride (GuHCl) equilibrium density gradient centrifugation. Although a molecular weight in excess of 10(7) Da is suggested by gel filtration, the presence of SDS or GuHCl did not alter its elution position, indicating that the large size was not simply due to aggregation. Treatment of this material with disulfide reagents, however, led to a decrease in molecular size. On a relative basis, substantially more of this glycoprotein is present in IPM prepared from retina than from retinal pigment epithelium. While the carbohydrate and amino acid composition are not those of a true 'mucin', the large size and many other properties are quite 'mucin-like'. The carbohydrate composition suggests the presence of both N- and O-glycosidically linked sugar chains. The presence of a mucin-type O-glycosidic linkage is indicated by its susceptibility to alkaline cleavage, with concomitant loss of serine and threonine and increase in 240 nm absorbance; production of a fluorescent product upon reaction with cyanoacetamide; lectin binding properties; and production of N-acetylgalactosaminitol upon alkaline borohydride elimination. This glycoprotein was digested by pronase and trypsin, confirming its protein nature, but was resistant to digestion with
chondroitin ABC lyase
, hyaluronidase and
heparinase
, as well as RNAase, indicating that these components were not present to any appreciable extent. ELISA for cartilage keratan sulfate was also negative. Centrifugation in CsCl/GuHCl gradients indicated a density much lower than that of a proteoglycan or nucleic acid as well. In vitro biosynthetic studies suggest that both retina and retinal pigment epithelium may be major sources of material in the IPM. The elution patterns of radioactivity were strikingly similar to the UV elution patterns of IPM. The medium from retinal incubations contained very high molecular weight material which was resistant to enzymes which hydrolyse glycosaminoglycans, suggesting that retina may be the source of this high molecular weight, mucin-like glycoprotein.
...
PMID:High molecular weight mucin-like glycoproteins of the bovine interphotoreceptor matrix. 154 29
Glycosaminoglycans have been demonstrated throughout the cutaneous BMZ at the ultrastructural level. Colloidal iron and cationised ferritin proved of limited value, whilst staining with Alcian blue and application of the critical electrolyte concentration principle has provided evidence for the presence of sulphated GAGs at the lamina lucida and lamina reticularis. Digestions with
chondroitin ABC lyase
and
heparin lyase
have confirmed the existence of chondroitin and/or dermatan sulphates and heparan sulphates, although the results obtained with hyaluronate lyase have indicated that hyaluronates are also present.
...
PMID:Ultrastructural localisation of anionic sites at the dermo-epidermal junction in normal human skin. 171 20
Glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) including chondroitin sulfate, dermatan sulfate, heparan sulfate, heparin, and keratan sulfate types I (corneal) and II (cartilage) added to buffer, plasma and urine were enzymatically depolymerized. Enzymes, including
chondroitin ABC lyase
(chondroitinase ABC),
heparin lyase
(
heparinase
), heparan sulfate lyase (heparitinase), endo-beta-galactosidase and keratanase were used to depolymerize each GAG. Depolymerized GAGs and GAG mixtures were fractionated using gradient polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Staining with alcian blue dye resulted in a distinctive and well resolved banding pattern for each GAG. When these same gels were silver stained, an increase in detection sensitivity of 1000-fold was obtained. Picogram quantities of an oligosaccharide standard in buffer could be detected with silver staining while nanogram quantities could be detected in urine or plasma. The banding pattern observed for each depolymerized GAG was well resolved from contaminants found in these biological fluids and from intact GAGs. Endogenous GAGs present in samples of human urine and plasma were first concentrated and then enzymatically depolymerized. Chondroitin or dermatan sulfates, heparan sulfate and keratan sulfate were each detected in both concentrated plasma and urine samples.
...
PMID:Electrophoresis and detection of nanogram quantities of exogenous and endogenous glycosaminoglycans in biological fluids. 171 41
To clarify the role of electrostatic interactions in the binding of Sindbis virus (SNV) to cell membrane receptors, we investigated the effect of different polyions on the initial steps of infection of Vero cells by the virus. Several polyanions (mucin, heparin, polygalacturonic acid) and polycations (polylysine, protamine, polybrene) were able to reduce the replication of SNV when present in the viral adsorption period, whereas others (chondroitin sulfate, polymyxin B sulfate, histone) were devoid of any activity. Therefore the electric charge alone is not sufficient to explain the action of compounds. The effects of polyions on receptor binding, on bound virus, and on internalized virus have been examined. All the drugs inhibited SNV infection by affecting its binding to the cellular receptor. The results indicated that heparin and mucin act directly on the virus particle while polycations bind to the cell membrane receptor for the virus, protamine being effective on both targets. Since among polyanions glycosaminoglycans showed a strong inhibiting activity, the involvement of these molecules in the virus surface receptor was assessed by enzyme digestion of cell membrane with
heparinase
and
chondroitin ABC lyase
.
...
PMID:Effect of polyions on the early events of Sindbis virus infection of Vero cells. 175 5
Proliferation of smooth muscle cells is an important component of pulmonary arterial morphogenesis, both during normal development and pathologic remodeling. However, little is known of the factors that regulate smooth muscle proliferation in these vessels. To investigate the hypothesis that factors produced by endothelial cells may regulate smooth muscle cell growth, we studied the effects of culture medium conditioned by fetal bovine pulmonary arterial endothelium on proliferation of smooth muscle cells in culture. This conditioned medium contains an inhibitor of smooth muscle proliferation that is degraded by nitrous acid,
heparinase
, and heparitinase, but resists degradation by protease, boiling, and
chondroitin ABC lyase
, indicating that the inhibitor is structurally similar to heparin. Inhibitor release occurs in both growing and confluent endothelial cell cultures and in the presence and absence of serum. A growth-inhibiting proteoglycan purified to homogeneity from endothelial cell-conditioned medium has physicochemical characteristics similar to those of the prototypic basement membrane heparan sulfate proteoglycan of the Englebreth-Holm-Swarm tumor: an overall size of approximately 10(6) D, heparan sulfate chains of 60,000 D, and a buoyant density of 1.33 g/ml. Antibody raised against the tumor basement proteoglycan recognizes this endothelial heparan sulfate proteoglycan, and Western blotting after SDS-PAGE demonstrates that the core proteins of both proteoglycans migrate as a doublet at apparent molecular weights of 450,000 and 360,000 D. Heparan sulfate glycosaminoglycan prepared from purified medium proteoglycan is a potent inhibitor of smooth muscle cell growth, exhibiting activity approximately 1,000 times greater than that of heparin. These results indicate that endothelial cells cultured from fetal bovine pulmonary arteries produce a basement membrane heparan sulfate proteoglycan that is a potent inhibitor of smooth muscle proliferation. This proteoglycan may mediate endothelial regulation of smooth muscle growth during development or pathologic pulmonary arterial remodeling.
...
PMID:Endothelial heparan sulfate proteoglycan. I. Inhibitory effects on smooth muscle cell proliferation. 213 6
Oligosaccharides prepared from glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) including heparin, heparan sulfate, chondroitin sulfates, dermatan sulfate, and keratan sulfate were analyzed using reverse-phase ion-pairing HPLC and ion-exchange HPLC with suppressed conductivity detection. The results were compared with those obtained by strong anion-exchange HPLC using uv detection. These oligosaccharides were first prepared by enzymatically depolymerizing the GAGs with enzymes including
heparin lyase
(
EC 4.2.2.7
), heparan sulfate lyase (EC 4.2.2.8),
chondroitin ABC lyase
(
EC 4.2.2.4
), and keratan sulfate hydrolase (EC 3.2.1.103). Analysis was then performed without derivitization under isocratic conditions with a limit of sensitivity in the picomole range. Preliminary studies suggest that this approach may be particularly useful in examining oligosaccharides having no uv chromophore such as those prepared from keratan sulfate.
...
PMID:Analysis of glycosaminoglycan-derived oligosaccharides using reversed-phase ion-pairing and ion-exchange chromatography with suppressed conductivity detection. 251 May 51
Human lung mast cells (HLMC) enriched up to 99% purity by counter current elutriation and density gradient centrifugation were labeled with 35S-sulfate to determine cell-associated proteoglycans. The 35S-labeled proteoglycans were extracted by the addition of detergent and 4 M guanidine-HCl, and separated from unincorporated precursor by Sephadex G-50 chromatography. 35S-Proteoglycans chromatographed over Sepharose 4B with a Kav of 0.48. 35S-Glycosaminoglycans separated from the parent 35S-proteoglycans by beta-elimination and chromatographed over Sepharose 4B with a Kav of 0.63. Characterization of 35S-proteoglycans by
chondroitin ABC lyase
treatment revealed approximately 36% of the proteoglycan to be composed of chondroitin sulfates. Analysis by HPLC of component disaccharides liberated by
chondroitin ABC lyase
using an amino-cyano-substituted silica column indicated that the chondroitin sulfates consisted of the monosulfated A disaccharide (GlcUA----GaINAc4SO4) (75%) and the over-sulfated E disaccharide (GlcUA----GaINAc4,6-diSO4) (25%). Nitrous acid/
heparinase
-susceptible heparin proteoglycans accounted for approximately 62% of the total 35S-proteoglycans present in the HLMC. Proteoglycans remaining after exposure of the original proteoglycan extract to either
heparinase
or
chondroitin ABC lyase
were of similar size, suggesting that the majority of heparin and chondroitin sulfate glycosaminoglycans were on separate protein cores. Proteoglycans extracted from HLMC were protease insensitive. Hence, in addition to heparin proteoglycans, HLMC synthesize a hitherto unrecognized quantity of chondroitin sulfate E proteoglycans.
...
PMID:Identification of chondroitin sulfate E in human lung mast cells. 335 2
Polysaccharide lyases (or eliminases) are a class of enzymes (EC 4.2.2.-) that act to cleave certain activated glycosidic linkages present in acidic polysaccharides. These enzymes act through an eliminase mechanism, rather than through hydrolysis, resulting in unsaturated oligosaccharide products. Acidic polysaccharides are ubiquitous and so are the lyases that degrade them. This review article examines lyases that act on acidic polysaccharides of plant, animal, and microbial origin. These lyases are predominantly of microbial origin and come from a wide variety of both pathogenic and nonpathogenic bacteria and fungi. The lyases discussed include alginate lyase (EC 4.2.2.3), pectin lyase (EC 4.2.2.10), pectate lyase (EC 4.2.2.2), oligogalacturonide lyase (EC 4.2.2.6), exopolygalacturonate lyase (EC 4.2.2.9), chondroitin lyases (
EC 4.2.2.4
and EC 4.2.2.5), hyaluronate lyase (EC 4.2.2.1),
heparin lyase
(
EC 4.2.2.7
), heparan lyase (EC 4.2.2.8), and other unclassified lyases. This review examines the sources, regulation, purification, and properties of these polysaccharide lyases.
...
PMID:Polysaccharide lyases. 352 91
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