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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)
Org 10172 provided adequate anticoagulation for this patient. An excellent correlation between anti-
factor Xa
activity and ACT was observed at the doses used for CPB. If high-dose Org 10172 is used, these data suggest that it may be possible to circumvent the measurement of anti-
factor Xa
activity by using the ACT as an index of this heparinoid's anticoagulant effect. Because postoperative bleeding may be excessive, however, development of a method of reversal of Org 10172 is desirable. Although the optimal ACT, dose, plasma concentration, and means of reversal (e.g., protamine vs.
heparinase
) remains to be determined, heparinoids provide an alternate means of anticoagulation for CPB in patients unable to receive standard heparin.
...
PMID:"Heparin-free" cardiopulmonary bypass: first reported use of heparinoid (Org 10172) to provide anticoagulation for cardiopulmonary bypass. 169 48
A 77-kDa complex of thrombin and a protein secreted by activated platelets had little if any thrombin amidolytic activity, indicating that the secreted protein is an inhibitor. The molecular weight of the inhibitor before reaction with thrombin was approximately 50,000. The apparent second-order rate constant for complex formation was estimated to be 1.3 x 10(6) M-1 s-1 (mean of four measurements); it was not affected by heparin or
heparinase
. These properties distinguish this inhibitor from other protease inhibitors secreted by platelets. The inhibitor reacted with trypsin and possibly with urokinase but not with
factor Xa
.
...
PMID:Characteristics of a thrombin inhibitor secreted by activated platelets. 210 89
Low molecular weight heparins from a variety of commercial sources were examined. These had been prepared by several methods including peroxidative cleavage, nitrous acid cleavage, chemical beta-elimination, enzymatic beta-elimination, and chromatographic fractionation. The molecular weight and polydispersity of these low molecular weight heparins showed greater differences than were observed for typical commercial heparin preparations. Considerable differences were also observed in the antithrombin III mediated anti
factor Xa
activity, the heparin cofactor II mediated antifactor IIa activity, and the USP activity of these low molecular weight heparins. An oligosaccharide-mapping technique (comparable to the peptide mapping of proteins) was applied to these low molecular weight heparins in an effort to understand the structural features responsible for their activity differences.
Heparin lyase
from Flavobacterium heparinum was first used to depolymerize the low molecular weight heparin into its constituent oligosaccharides. The oligosaccharides present in the resultant mixture were identified and quantitated by using standard oligosaccharides of defined structure on gradient polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and strong anion exchange high pressure liquid chromatography. Six of the oligosaccharide products have been identified and represent nearly 90 wt % of heparin's mass. Even though all the low molecular weight heparins showed these six oligosaccharide components, their content in each varied greatly, accounting for 20 to over 90% of their mass. The antithrombin III mediated anti
factor Xa
activities of the low molecular weight heparins correlated only poorly to the concentration of a hexasaccharide containing a portion of heparin's antithrombin III binding site. The heparin cofactor II mediated antifactor IIa activity, however, could not be correlated to these six oligosaccharides of known structure nor to the molecular weight or charge density of these low molecular weight heparins. The low molecular weight heparins prepared by different methods each showed a new distinctive oligosaccharide in their maps. Their isolation and structural characterization, which included two-dimensional NMR and fast atom bombardment mass spectrometry, indicated that these unusual oligosaccharides result from end-sugar modification during chemical depolymerization. Both gel electrophoresis and high-pressure liquid chromatography mapping techniques showed a greater structural diversity between low molecular weight heparins than had previously been observed between similarly analyzed commercial heparins.
...
PMID:Oligosaccharide mapping of low molecular weight heparins: structure and activity differences. 216 May 37
Studies were conducted to define the location of components and sequences in heparin with respect to their distance from the peptide linkage in the native proteoglycan. A purified heparin-oligopeptide was linked via its amino terminus to a matrix containing an azo bond and an activated carboxyl group. The polysaccharide chain was maximally degraded, either with
heparinase
or nitrous acid, and the soluble products were removed. The heparin-oligopeptide fragments that remained on the matrix were released by reductive cleavage of the azo linkage and characterized. The fragments, as well as heparin released without prior degradation, contained serine and glycine as the principal amino acids; the ratio of galactose to xylose was 2:1. The ratio of glucosamine to serine of 33:1 in the undegraded heparin was reduced to 6:1 and 1:1 in the
heparinase
-treated and nitrous acid-treated products, respectively. The undegraded sample and the fragments contained phosphate in equivalent amounts, demonstrating its presence in the heparin-protein linkage region. The heparin-oligopeptide preparation was also fractionated by gel filtration and high and low molecular weight fractions thus obtained were each linked to the insoluble matrix. The products that were subsequently released were subfractionated on a molecular weight-calibrated column of Sephadex G-200, and eluates were assayed for activity in promoting the neutralization of thrombin and
factor Xa
by antithrombin. The results revealed a sharp decrease in specific activity in heparin-oligopeptide fractions below Mr = 15,000 indicating that the anticoagulant-conferring segment is located at about 20 disaccharide units away from the peptide linkage region.
...
PMID:Location of specific oligosaccharides in heparin in terms of their distance from the protein linkage region in the native proteoglycan. 333 97
We have previously shown that angiogenesis inhibition and tumor regression can be accomplished by combinations of heparin or heparin fragments with cortisone [Folkman, J., Langer, R., Linhardt, R. J., Haudenschild, C. & Taylor, S. (1983) Science 221, 719-725]. Oral heparin was also effective in combination with cortisone. We now show that a single oral dose of [35S]heparin or [3H]heparin (15,000 units/kg) results in continuous release of radioactive material into the bloodstream for at least 12 hr. This is associated with the presence of anti-
factor Xa
activity at a level of approximately equal to 0.1 unit/ml. The radioactive material is identified as oligo-, di-, and monosaccharides by its behavior in chromatographic systems, its possession of anti-
factor Xa
activity, and the effect of treatment with bacterial
heparinase
. The heparin fragments are extensively metabolized to fragments without anti-
factor Xa
activity that are readily subject to urinary excretion.
...
PMID:Oral heparin results in the appearance of heparin fragments in the plasma of rats. 345 56
To control blood levels of heparin during extracorporeal therapy, the use of a blood filter containing
heparinase
, a heparin-specific enzyme that cleaves heparin to small fragments with less anticoagulant activity, has been proposed. These fragments have anti-
factor Xa
activity but no anti-thrombin activity. The potential toxicity of heparin fragments as compared to heparin was examined in rats by identifying presumptive sites of drug-related toxicity by whole-body autoradiography and by histological examination of major organs. Radioautograms of rats sacrificed 5 hr after dosing with [35S]heparin fragments indicated no potential targets different from what was observed in rats dosed with [35S]heparin. In addition, the faster urinary clearance of heparin fragments resulted in a lower concentration of these fragments than of heparin in all common target organs. No hemorrhages or other lesions were found in rats injected intravenously with heparin fragments (100 mg/kg) and sacrificed after 5 hr. In addition, no mortality or delayed toxic effects were observed in a similar group of animals sacrificed 2 weeks after dosing. In contrast, 80% of rats injected with heparin (100 mg/kg) showed hemorrhages of the lungs at the time of necropsy.
...
PMID:Comparative studies of heparin and heparin fragments: distribution and toxicity in the rat. 373 75
Bovine antithrombin III (AT III) interaction with the luminal surface of bovine aortic segments with a continuous layer of endothelium was examined. Incubation of 125I-AT III with vessel segments, previously washed free of endogenous AT III, demonstrated specific, time-dependent binding to the protease inhibitor to the endothelium. Half-maximal binding was observed at an added AT III concentration of 14 nM. Binding of 125I-AT III to the vessel wall was reversible (50% dissociated in 4 min), and addition of either heparin or Factor Xa accelerated displacement of 125I-AT III from the vessel segment. Dissociation of 125I-AT III from the vessel segment in the presence of
factor Xa
coincided with the formation of a Factor Xa-125I-AT III complex. Inactivation of Factor IXa and Factor Xa by AT III was facilitated in the presence of vessel segments. Pretreatment of vessel segments with highly purified Flavobacterium
heparinase
precluded the vessel-dependent augmentation of AT III anticoagulant activity as well as specific binding of 125I-AT III to the vessel endothelium. In contrast, pretreatment of the vessel segments with chrondroitinases (ABC or AC) had no detectable effect on 125I-AT III binding or on AT III anticoagulant activity. AT III binding to vessel segments was competitively inhibited by increasing concentration of platelet factor 4. Binding of the protease inhibitor to vessel segments was inhibited by chemical modification of AT III lysyl or tryptophan residues. These AT III derivatives retained progressive inhibitory activity. These data suggest that heparin-like molecules are present on the aortic vessel wall and mediate binding of AT III to the vessel surface, as well as enhancing the anticoagulant activity of AT III at these sites.
...
PMID:Interaction of antithrombin III with bovine aortic segments. Role of heparin in binding and enhanced anticoagulant activity. 396 7
We have isolated from nitrous acid cleavage products of heparin two major octasaccharide fragments which bind with high affinity to human antithrombin. Octasaccharide S, with the predominant structure iduronic acid----N-acetylglucosamine 6-O-sulfate----glucuronic acid-----N-sulfated glucosamine 3,6-di-O-sulfate----iduronic acid 2-O-sulfate----N-sulfated glucosamine 6-O-sulfate----iduronic acid 2-O-sulfate----anhydromannitol 6-O-sulfate, is sensitive to cleavage by Flavobacterium
heparinase
as well as platelet heparitinase and binds to antithrombin with a dissociation constant of (5-15) X 10(-8) M. Octasaccharide R, with the predominant structure iduronic acid 2-O-sulfate----N-sulfated glucosamine 6-O-sulfate----iduronic acid----N-acetylglucosamine 6-O-sulfate----glucuronic acid----N-sulfated glucosamine 3,6-di-O-sulfate----iduronic acid 2-O-sulfate----anhydromannitol 6-O-sulfate, is resistant to degradation by both enzymes and binds antithrombin with a dissociation constant of (4-18) X 10(-7) M. The occurrence of a 15-17% replacement of N-sulfated glucosamine 3,6-di-O-sulfate with N-sulfated glucosamine 3-O-sulfate and a 10-12% replacement of iduronic acid with glucuronic acid in both octasaccharides indicates that these substitutions have little or no effect on the binding of the oligosaccharides to the protease inhibitor. When bound to antithrombin, both octasaccharides produce a 40% enhancement in the intrinsic fluorescence of the protease inhibitor and a rate of human
factor Xa
inhibition of 5 X 10(5) M-1 s-1 as monitored by stopped-flow fluorometry. This suggests that the conformation of antithrombin in the region of the
factor Xa
binding site is similar when the protease inhibitor is complexed with either octasaccharide.
...
PMID:Sequence variation in heparin octasaccharides with high affinity for antithrombin III. 652 37
Porcine intestinal heparin was partially digested with a purified
heparinase
and an octasaccharide with high-affinity for antithrombin III was isolated from the digest by gel filtration, followed by affinity chromatography on a column of Sepharose 4B coupled with antithrombin III. The anticoagulant activity determined by the activated partial thromboplastin time method of the octasaccharide was 240 units/mg. Fifty percent inactivation activities of the octasaccharide for thrombin and
factor Xa
in the presence of antithrombin III were 2 and 6.5 times, respectively, higher than those of the initial heparin. These data indicate that the octasaccharide possesses the critical structural integrities required for manifesting these biological activities.
...
PMID:Anticoagulant activity of heparin octasaccharide. 733 23
We examined the ability of unfractionated heparin to modulate the procoagulant activities of stimulated endothelial cells (EC). Confluent human venous umbilical EC were incubated with heparin before or after stimulation, then rinsed extensively to eliminate any heparin in the solution. EC, stimulated for 4 h with endotoxin and interleukin 1 beta, expressed tissue factor and
prothrombinase
activities. When EC were treated with heparin (6 and 60 micrograms/ml) during the last 10 min of the stimulation period, EC-related procoagulant activities were inhibited in a dose-dependent manner (80-90% inhibition at 60 micrograms/ml). The inhibition was antithrombin-dependent and it disappeared after heparin removal in less than 15 min at 37 degrees C but persisted at 4 degrees C. When EC were treated with heparin (60 micrograms/ml) for 24 h then extensively washed before stimulation, the anticoagulant effect was more modest (50% inhibition). The effect was antithrombin-dependent. Inhibition was maximum after 18-24 h of pretreatment of EC with heparin and was stable for at least 7 h. The cell surface displayed a "heparin-like" activity: treatment by heparin doubled the rate of thrombin-antithrombin complex formation and this effect was
heparinase
sensitive and chondroitinase ABC insensitive. Thus, heparin modulates the procoagulant properties of stimulated EC according to two distinct mechanisms. The first one is rapid and transient, probably related to the presence of heparin molecules bound at the membrane surface. The second is delayed and persistent, and our results suggest that it is mediated by an increase in the membrane heparan sulfate molecules.
...
PMID:Heparin reverses the procoagulant properties of stimulated endothelial cells. 871
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