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)

This paper reports an unrecognized aspect of phosphotungstic acid staining at low pH. It provides an on-section staining method in which sialic acid-containing molecules can be demonstrated in the laminae rarae of the rat glomerular basement membrane. The staining in the basement membrane became negative after perfusion with the following cations: protamine sulphate, hexadimethrine, Alcian Blue, Ruthenium Red and Toluidine Blue. Blocking was not achieved with Alcian Blue at about pH 1. The staining was also abolished after mild methylation and demethylation restored the contrast. This is suggestive of the involvement of carboxyl groups. Prior digestion with pronase, trypsin and neuraminidase rendered the laminae rarae negative, whereas hyaluronidase, chondroitinase ABC and crude heparinase were without effect. This indicates that sialic acid groups are detected by this method and that heparan sulphate does not interfere. The staining of the epithelial plasma membrane, also carrying sialic acid groups, remained positive after neuraminidase treatment. It is presumed that this method can be applied successfully for detecting changes in the sialic acid content of the laminae rarae in rat glomerular basement membranes under normal and pathological conditions.
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PMID:Demonstration of sialic acid groups in the glomerular basement membrane of the rat with phosphotungstic acid at low pH. 241 Mar 95

Monoclonal antibodies, 17B1 and 17Q2, which are specific for large molecular weight mucous glycoproteins of airway epithelium, have been used to develop an ELISA method to quantitate the tracheal mucins of humans and rhesus monkeys. The assay is a double-sandwich system that does not depend on either the binding of mucous antigens to the microtiter plate or the use of a second antibody. The assay protocol includes (1) coating the microtiter well with purified IgG of 17B1 or 17Q2, (2) incubating the wells with mucous samples, (3) binding of alkaline phosphatase-conjugated IgG to the wells, and (4) developing the color with phosphate substrate. This ELISA method is very sensitive for human and rhesus monkey tracheal mucins. Quantitation is not affected by the presence of various proteoglycans (keratan sulfate, hyaluronate, heparin, heparan sulfate, and chondroitin sulfate). However, the quantitation is affected by the treatment of antigen with periodic acid and endo-beta-galactosidase. Other enzymes (e.g., neuraminidase, hyaluronidase, chondroitinase, heparitinase, heparinase, fucosidase, keratanase) have no effect on the antigenicity of substrate. The quantitation is linear, with a concentration from 0.2 to 4 ng protein/sample. The ELISA method developed in this study should be useful for quantitating the mucin content of various biologic fluids, such as sputum, bronchoalveolar lavage, and media from cultures following various pharmacologic and physiologic manipulations.
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PMID:An ELISA method for the quantitation of tracheal mucins from human and nonhuman primates. 262 58

Pro-inflammatory effects of cationic proteins secreted by human granulocytes include induction of increased vascular permeability and oedema, which are likely to be mediated by damage to vascular endothelium. We have shown previously that a series of synthetic polycationic amino acids produce a dose-, time- and Mr-dependent inhibition of [3H]leucine or [3H]thymidine incorporation into macromolecules by human umbilical vein endothelial cells, and that the extent of inhibition was correlated with changes in cell morphology, with release of cytoplasmic constituents and was irreversible. The experiments reported here characterise further the requirements for the induction of cytotoxicity by polycations. We have found that the extent of inhibition is related to both the identity of the monomer, for polymers of Mr 40,000 the order is ornithine greater than lysine greater than arginine, and to its configuration; poly-D-lysines are more potent inhibitors than poly-L-lysines of similar Mr. Only brief exposure to the agonist is required, 90% inhibition occurred after 10 min of exposure to poly-L-lysine (Mr 90,000). Treatment of endothelial cells with neuraminidase, heparinase, hyaluronidase, chondroitinase or trypsin did not reduce their susceptibility to polylysine. Inhibition of microtubule or microfilament formation also had no effect on polylysine cytotoxicity, indicating that internalisation of the polymer was not a prerequisite for the effect. Inhibition of protein synthesis or pretreatment with simple sugars likewise failed to block the effects of polylysine treatment. Natural cationic proteins exerted similar effects on endothelial cells, the extent of the effect apparently being related to the pI of the protein.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Biochemical characterisation of polycation-induced cytotoxicity to human vascular endothelial cells. 263 82

Three types (T1, T2, T3) of proteoglycan (PG) filaments, as demonstrated by cuprolinic blue (CB) under critical electrolyte concentration method in the epithelial-stromal interface of the guinea pig lateral prostate, were characterized cytochemically by using a number of glycosaminoglycan(GAG)-degrading enzymes and nitrous acid. The results showed that T1 filaments located in basement membranes of the epithelium, endothelium, and smooth muscle cells, were removed by nitrous acid, heparitinase, and pronase but resistant to chondroitinase (Ch)-ABC and Ch-AC, heparinase, neuraminidase, and Streptomyces (S) hyaluronidase. The T1 filaments, therefore, contain heparan sulfate. The T2 filaments closely linked to collagen fibrils were removed by Ch-ABC, Ch-ABC plus S-hyaluronidase, and pronase but were resistant to nitrous acid, heparitinase, heparinase, neuraminidase, and S-hyaluronidase. These show that T2 filaments are rich in dermatan sulfate. The T3 filaments in the interstitial spaces and on the surface of fibroblasts were removed by Ch-ABC, Ch-AC, and pronase but were resistant to heparitinase, heparinase, hyaluronidase, neuraminidase, and nitrous acid. They are, therefore, rich in chondroitin sulfate.
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PMID:Cytochemical characterization of cuprolinic blue-stained proteoglycans in the epithelial-stromal interface of the guinea pig lateral prostate. 271 Jun 91

The chemical nature of anionic sites located on both fronts of the endothelial cells (ECs) and in the basement membrane (BM) of mouse brain capillaries was studied using tissue sections embedded in Lowicryl K4M and cationic colloidal gold. Before labelling with cationic probe, the sections were digested with the following enzymes: trypsin, papain, pronase E, proteinase K, collagenase, chondroitinase ABC, hyaluronidase, heparinase, heparitinase, neuraminidase and endoglycosidase H. The results indicate that the negatively charged surface layer on the luminal front differs in chemical nature from that on the abluminal front of the EC. Anionic sites located on the luminal surface of the plasmalemma of the ECs are mainly contributed by sialic acid residues of acidic glycoproteins. On the contrary, the anionic domains on the abluminal front of the EC represent mixed proteoglycan and acid glycopeptides containing hydrophobic amino acids, sialic acid residues, and are rich in heparan sulphate-bearing glycosaminoglycans. The anionic sites of the BM are contributed in a substantial degree by chondroitin and heparan sulphate-rich glycosaminoglycans. The effect of endoglycosidase H suggests that glycopeptides containing oligomannosyl residues linked to N-acetylglucosamine contribute in small degree in maintenance of the negative charge in the BM, but not on the surfaces of the EC. These results show that brain endothelium bears surface anionic domains differing chemically from those described for some fenestrated and continuous endothelia. The distribution of anionic sites indicates that the discrimination against various negatively charged molecules takes place on both fronts of the ECs as well as in the BM of brain micro-blood vessels. The exact role of these domains in the function of the blood-brain barrier remains to be established.
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PMID:Ultracytochemical characterization of anionic sites in the wall of brain capillaries. 274 7

We have studied the ability of particulate stimuli to induce the release of reactive oxygen metabolites from sub-cultured monolayers of human endothelial cells. Basal release of superoxide (O2-) and hydrogen peroxide from undisturbed monolayers was very low (108 pmol O2- and 75 pmol H2O2 in 3 h from dishes of 3 X 10(5) cells). Addition of 1-micron diameter polystyrene microspheres, which were phagocytosed by the cells progressively, caused a dramatic increase in release of both metabolites; by 3 h, a 13.5- and 6.6-fold increase over controls was observed respectively (P less than 0.001). Addition of formaldehyde-fixed human platelets or chylomicron-size lipid particles also increased production of reactive oxygen species. Similar rises in H2O2 and O2- production were induced by treatment with 10(-7) M phorbol myristate acetate. Pretreatment of endothelial cells with neuraminidase, heparinase or heparitinase to alter their glycocalyx composition substantially enhanced the effect of microspheres on H2O2 and O2- generation. We conclude that the interactions of particles, including platelets and lipids, with endothelial cells leads to the generation of significant pericellular levels of reactive oxygen species. These metabolites can oxidise a wide variety of nearby molecules, leading to cell damage and altered uptake characteristics for lipoproteins containing peroxidized lipids. These effects are exacerbated when endothelial cell glycocalyx composition is disrupted.
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PMID:Generation of reactive oxygen metabolites by phagocytosing endothelial cells. 285 Aug 6

The location and chemical composition of anionic sites on the endothelium of the choriocapillaris was investigated with cationic ferritin and enzyme digestion techniques. Cationic ferritin administered intravenously initially labeled essentially all fenestral diaphragms. Within 30 min after injection, no diaphragms remained labeled, but they could be relabeled by a second cationic ferritin injection. Following perfusion of cationic ferritin, the entire luminal front of the endothelium was labeled: the plasmalemma and fenestral, vesicle, and channel diaphragms. Perfusion of neuraminidase or chondroitinase did not affect subsequent cationic ferritin binding. In contrast, heparitinase removed anionic sites on all structures except fenestral diaphragms. Cationic ferritin did not mark the endothelium following heparinase digestion. All sites were cleaved with pronase E. These results indicate that heparin is the anionic moiety on fenestral diaphragms while the glycocalices of the plasmalemma and vesicle and channel diaphragms are rich in a heparan sulfate proteoglycan. Furthermore, since the heparan sulfate localized to these structures was digested by both heparinase and heparitinase, it is in a form similar to heparin. These findings demonstrate that the endothelium of the choriocapillaris bears cell-surface anionic components that are different than those described for fenestrated endothelia lining other vascular beds.
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PMID:The cell surface of a restrictive fenestrated endothelium. II. Dynamics of cationic ferritin binding and the identification of heparin and heparan sulfate domains on the choriocapillaris. 293 59

In a previous paper, we demonstrated that deep hypothermia in dogs provokes a release of a heparin-like factor. In the present study, we investigated some properties of this anticoagulant activity and compared it with exogenous heparin activity. The endogenous anticoagulant inhibited factors IIa and Xa; it was hydrolysed by heparinase and was AT III dependent. However, it differed from heparin in so far as it was adsorbed on cation exchange gel at neutral pH, its inhibition was decreased in the presence of neuraminidase, and it could not be neutralized with Polybrene or protamine. A release of heparan sulphate is suggested but remains to be demonstrated.
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PMID:Characterization of a heparin-like activity released in dogs during deep hypothermia. 314 96

In the preceding two papers, we described two new classes of sulfated N-linked oligosaccharides isolated from total cellular 35SO4-labeled macromolecules of different mammalian cell lines. The first class carries various combinations of sialic acids and 6-O-sulfate esters on typical complex-type chains, while the second carries heparin and heparan-like sequences. In this study, we have characterized a sulfophosphoglycoprotein of 140 kDa from FG-Met-2 pancreatic cancer cells whose oligosaccharides share some properties of both these classes. The molecule was localized to the cell surface by electron microscopy using a monoclonal antibody (S3-53) and by cell surface 125I-labeling. Metabolic labeling of the cells with radioactive glucosamine, methionine, inorganic sulfate, or phosphate all demonstrated a single 140-kDa molecule. Pulse-chase analysis and tunicamycin treatment indicated the glycosylation of a putative primary translation product of 110 kDa via an intermediate (120 kDa) to the mature form (140 kDa). Digestion with peptide:N-glycosidase F (PNGaseF) indicated a minimum of four N-linked glycosylation sites. PNGaseF released more than 90% of the [6-3H]GlcNH2 label and 40-70% of 35SO4 label from the immunoprecipitated 140-kDa molecule. The isolated oligosaccharides were characterized as described in the preceding two papers. The majority of [6-3H]GlcNH2-labeled molecules were susceptible to neuraminidase. More than 50% of the 35SO4 label was associated with only 5-10% of the 3H-labeled chains. Some of the sulfated chains were partly sialylated molecules with four to five negative charges. Treatment with nitrous acid released about 25% of the 35SO4 label as free sulfate, together with 6% of the [6-3H]GlcNH2 label, indicating the presence of N-sulfated glucosamine residues. Some of these oligosaccharides were degraded by heparinase and heparitinase. Therefore, while they are not as highly charged as typical heparin or heparan chains, they must share structural features that permit recognition by the enzymes. Thus, this 140-kDa glycoprotein contains at least four asparagine-linked chains substituted with a heterogeneous mixture of sulfated sequences. The heterogeneity of these molecules is as extensive as that described for whole-cell sulfated N-linked oligosaccharides in the preceding two papers.
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PMID:Sulfated N-linked oligosaccharides in mammalian cells. III. Characterization of a pancreatic carcinoma cell surface glycoprotein with N- and O-sulfate esters on asparagine-linked glycans. 337 52

The retina is protected from circulating molecules by a blood-retinal barrier. This is comprised of the impermeable apical-lateral junctions of the retinal pigment epithelium and intraretinal blood vessels lined by endothelia that have impermeable junctions and vesicles that do not transport material from the luminal to abluminal front. This study examined the effect of enzyme digestion upon the restrictive properties of the retinal capillary endothelium. Rats were perfused first with enzymes and then by hemoglobin that was visualized by ultrastructural cytochemical methods. After perfusion of buffer alone or buffers containing neuraminidase or heparinase, the cytochemical reaction product was confined to the capillary lumina and to endothelial cell vesicles facing the luminal front. In contrast, after heparitinase or pronase perfusion, reaction product filled the extravascular spaces. Chains of endothelial cell vesicles and patent transendothelial channels were often encountered. Endothelial cell junctions did not appear to be affected by enzyme treatment. These findings indicate that a cell-surface heparan sulfate proteoglycan (or a nonidentified protein removed by proteolysis) is a key molecule required for the maintenance of the blood-retinal barrier.
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PMID:Perturbation of the blood-retinal barrier after enzyme perfusion. A cytochemical study. 357 19


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