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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)
The binding of fluorescently labeled microspheres (FLMs, 0.1-microm diameter) coated with antibody (1a29) to ICAM-1 was studied in postcapillary venules during topical application of the chemoattractant N-formylmethionyl-leucyl-
phenylalanine
(fMLP). FLM adhesion to endothelial cells (ECs) increased dramatically from 50 to 150 spheres per 100-microm length of venule after superfusion of the mesentery with fMLP and equaled or exceeded levels of leukocyte (WBC) adhesion. Removal of the EC glycocalyx by micropipette infusion of the venule with
heparinase
increased FLM-EC adhesion to levels attained with fMLP. Subsequent application of fMLP did not increase FLM adhesion further, suggesting that the FLMs saturated all ICAM-1 binding sites. Perfusion with
heparinase
after suffusion with fMLP significantly increased FLM-EC adhesion above levels attained with fMLP. However, WBC adhesion fell because of possible removal of selectins necessary to maintain WBC rolling at the wall. It is concluded that the glycocalyx serves as a barrier to adhesion and that its shedding during natural activation of ECs may be an essential part of the inflammatory response.
...
PMID:Role of glycocalyx in leukocyte-endothelial cell adhesion. 1223 77
Cyclophilin B (CyPB) is a heparin-binding protein first identified as a receptor for cyclosporin A. In previous studies, we reported that CyPB triggers chemotaxis and integrin-mediated adhesion of T-lymphocytes by way of interaction with two types of binding sites. The first site corresponds to a signalling receptor; the second site has been identified as heparan sulphate (HS) and appears crucial to induce cell adhesion. Characterization of the HS-binding unit is critical to understand the requirement of HS in pro-adhesive activity of CyPB. By using a strategy based on gel mobility shift assays with fluorophore-labelled oligosaccharides, we demonstrated that the minimal heparin unit required for efficient binding of CyPB is an octasaccharide. The mutants CyPB(KKK-) [where KKK- refers to the substitutions K3A(Lys3-->Ala)/K4A/K5A] and CyPB(DeltaYFD) (where Tyr14-
Phe
-Asp16 has been deleted) failed to interact with octasaccharides, confirming that the Y14FD16 and K3KK5 clusters are required for CyPB binding. Molecular modelling revealed that both clusters are spatially arranged so that they may act synergistically to form a binding site for the octasaccharide. We then demonstrated that heparin-derived octasaccharides and higher degree of polymerization oligosaccharides inhibited the interaction between CyPB and fluorophore-labelled HS chains purified from T-lymphocytes, and strongly reduced the HS-dependent pro-adhesive activity of CyPB. However, oligosaccharides or heparin were unable to restore adhesion of
heparinase
-treated T-lymphocytes, indicating that HS has to be present on the cell membrane to support the pro-adhesive activity of CyPB. Altogether, these results demonstrate that the octasaccharide is likely to be the minimal length unit required for efficient binding of CyPB to cell surface HS and consequent HS-dependent cell responses.
...
PMID:Octasaccharide is the minimal length unit required for efficient binding of cyclophilin B to heparin and cell surface heparan sulphate. 1510 1
Heparin has been widely reported to inhibit the growth of several cell types including neonatal rat cardiac myocyte (NRCM) but its effect on adult rat ventricular myocyte (ARVM) is unknown. To determine whether heparin is able to modulate ARVM protein synthesis capacity and if so which pathway is involved in this response, ARVM were cultured in presence or absence of 5% human serum and exposed to heparin (2-2,000 microg/ml) or its analogue xylan (0.5 and 50 microg/ml), and either the Ca(2+) chelator BAPTA/AM (10 microg/ml), or the calcineurin inhibitor FK506 (10 microg/ml), and
heparinase
I (0.1-10 U/ml) for 2 days. The protein synthesis (PS) was measured after 24 h incorporation of [14C]-
Phenylalanine
in ARVM. Independently of the serum presence, heparin and xylan altered PS in a bimodal dose-dependent manner. At high doses, heparin and xylan (2,000 and 50 microg/ml, respectively) either had no effect (without serum) or inhibited PS (with serum). In absence of serum, low doses of heparin or xylan (20 and 0.5 microg/ml, respectively) amplified the PS process in ARVM (2-fold, P < 0.05). FK506 inhibited the trophic response to 20 microg/ml heparin alone (-39%, P < 0.05). In presence of serum, the heparin induced-trophic effect, that was not significantly altered by FK506, was inhibited by BAPTA/AM (-32%, P < 0.05). Finally,
heparinase
I that increased PS in NRCM had no effect on ARVM growth. This study strongly suggests that heparin dose-dependently modulated PS in ARVM, this result being not observed in neonatal cells. Different mechanisms involving intracellular Ca(2+) play a role in the PS response of ARVM to low concentrations of heparin, the intracellular pathways depending on the presence of serum.
...
PMID:Dual effect of heparin on cultured adult rat cardiomyocytes. 1525 4
As the spherical diameter of pulmonary capillaries is smaller than that of neutrophils, increased neutrophil stiffness or conversely, decreased neutrophil deformability is a key step in the initial sequestration of neutrophils within the lungs during inflammatory processes. Antithrombin III (AT) is known to exert a therapeutic effect against disseminated intravascular coagulation, and accumulating evidence suggests that AT also has anti-inflammatory properties. The mechanisms of its anti-inflammatory effects remain unclear, but in a rat endotoxin model, AT apparently inhibited neutrophil sequestration in the lung. In the present in vitro study, therefore, we examined the effect of AT on the deformability of human neutrophils and correlated those findings with their F-actin content. Isolated human neutrophils were stimulated with formyl-Met-Leu-
Phe
(1 muM, 2 min) in the presence or absence of the alpha, beta, or low heparin-affinity isoforms of AT (1 IU/ml, 20 min), and deformability was evaluated using a filter assay system. Neutrophils were also stained with fluorescein isothiocyanate-phalloidin and subjected to a fluorescein-activated cell sorter scan to assess F-actin content. The results showed that pretreatment with any of the three AT isoforms similarly inhibited the decreased neutrophil deformability and increased F-actin content of stimulated cells. Notably,
heparinase
had no effect on deformability or F-actin content in the presence or absence of AT, which was somewhat unexpected, as heparin sulfate proteoglycans likely function as AT receptors. These findings suggested that AT inhibits the increase in neutrophil stiffness seen during inflammatory processes by inhibiting actin polymerization via a heparin-independent pathway.
...
PMID:Effect of antithrombin III on neutrophil deformability. 1600 Mar 88
Cathelicidins are mammalian proteins containing a C-terminal cationic antimicrobial domain. Porcine PR-39 cathelicidin affects leukocyte biology. Mechanisms of action may involve alteration of heparan sulfate proteoglycan-dependent functions in inflammatory cells. It was tested whether PR-39 affects human neutrophil migration and if such effects involve heparan sulphate proteoglycans. Neutrophils were from forearm venous blood of healthy donors. Migration was tested in modified Boyden chamber assays. Involvement of heparan sulfate proteoglycans was tested by their chemical modification and by the use of specific antibodies. PR-39 induced migration in neutrophils in a concentration dependent manner. Modification of heparan sulfate proteoglycans with sodium chlorate inhibited migration whereas chemotaxis toward the chemoattractant formyl-Met-Leu-
Phe
was not affected. Removal of heparan sulfates or chondroitin sulfates from the surface of neutrophils by
heparinase
or chondroitinase inhibited migration toward PR-39. In conclusion, antimicrobial PR-39 stimulates human neutrophil chemotaxis in a heparan sulfate proteoglycan-dependent manner. Involvement of syndecans is likely as both
heparinase
and chondroitinase were abrogating. Data suggest active participation of heparan sulfate proteoglycans of neutrophils in cathelicidin peptide-mediated regulation of the antimicrobial host defense.
...
PMID:Heparan sulfate proteoglycan-dependent neutrophil chemotaxis toward PR-39 cathelicidin. 1708 Dec 80