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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)
Calf microvasculature was isolated from retina and cerebral gray matter. These preparations contained 0.048-0.060 U of heparin-like anticoagulant activity per gram of wet tissue. The retinal microvascular material contained no detectable mast cells. The anticoagulant potency of this product was associated solely with endothelial cells. This property appears to be due to a heparinlike proteoglycan since molecular species with biologic activity are precipitated with 10% (wt/vol)
trichloroacetic acid
and are destroyed by incubation with Flavobacterium
heparinase
. Furthermore, the above component functions in a manner virtually identical to heparin since approximately 60% of these species with anticoagulant activity bind to antithrombin-concanavalin A-Sepharose 4B, and only 15% of their biologic potency is expressed in the presence of antithrombin modified near the mucopolysaccharide binding domain. The cerebral microvascular tissue contained a trace subpopulation of mast cells (approximately 0.3%). The anticoagulant activity of this preparation is most probably associated with both endothelial cells and mast cells. However, complete separation of these two cellular elements has proven difficult with current methodology.
...
PMID:Microvascular heparin-like species with anticoagulant activity. 635 38
Using cultured cells from bovine and rat aortas, we have examined the possibility that endothelial cells might regulate the growth of vascular smooth muscle cells. Conditioned medium from confluent bovine aortic endothelial cells inhibited the proliferation of growth-arrested smooth muscle cells. Conditioned medium from exponential endothelial cells, and from exponential or confluent smooth muscle cells and fibroblasts, did not inhibit smooth muscle cell growth. Conditioned medium from confluent endothelial cells did not inhibit the growth of endothelial cells or fibroblasts. In addition to the apparent specificity of both the producer and target cell, the inhibitory activity was heat stable and not affected by proteases. It was sensitive flavobacterium
heparinase
but not to hyaluronidase or chondroitin sulfate ABC lyase. It thus appears to be a heparinlike substance. Two other lines of evidence support this conclusion. First, a crude isolate of glycosaminoglycans (
TCA
-soluble, ethanol-precipitable material) from endothelial cell-conditioned medium reconstituted in 20 percent serum inhibited smooth muscle cell growth; glycosaminoglycans isolated from unconditioned medium (i.e., 0.4 percent serum) had no effect on smooth muscle cell growth. No inhibition was seen if the glycosaminoglycan preparation was treated with
heparinase
. Second, exogenous heparin, heparin sulfate, chondroitin sulfate B (dermatan sulfate), chondroitin sulfate ABC, and hyaluronic acid were added to 20 percent serum and tested for their ability to inhibit smooth muscle cell growth. Heparin inhibited growth at concentrations as low as 10 ng/ml. Other glycosaminoglycans had no effect at doses up to 10 mug/ml. Anticoagulant and non- anticoagulant heparin were equally effective at inhibiting smooth muscle cell growth, as they were in vivo following endothelial injury (Clowes and Karnovsk. Nature (Lond.). 265:625-626, 1977; Guyton et al. Circ. Res. 46:625-634, 1980), and in vitro following exposure of smooth muscle cells to platelet extract (Hoover et al. Circ. Res. 47:578-583, 1980). We suggest that vascular endothelial cells may secrete a heparinlike substance in vivo which may regulate the growth of underlying smooth muscle cells.
...
PMID:Cultured endothelial cells produce a heparinlike inhibitor of smooth muscle cell growth. 728 12
1. Particulate fractions prepared from disrupted cells of Bacillus licheniformis N.C.T.C. 6346 catalyse the uptake of radioactivity from UDP-[(14)C]glucuronic acid or UDP-N[(14)C]-acetylglucosamine. Maximal uptake requires the presence of both nucleotides and Mg(2+) ions. The reaction is inhibited markedly by high concentrations of novobiocin and, to a certain extent, by vancomycin and by methicillin. 2. The radioactive product formed is resistant to Pronase and is soluble in 5% (w/v)
trichloroacetic acid
. It is of high molecular weight, from its behaviour on columns of Sephadex G-50 or G-200, and behaves during paper electrophoresis in n-acetic acid and chromatography on DEAE-cellulose in a manner similar to teichuronic acid. 3. Both teichuronic acid and the synthesized material are resistant to testicular hyaluronidase and to Flavobacterium heparinum
heparinase
. 4. The specific activity of suspensions of broken cells or of washed particulate fractions is greatest when they are prepared from exponentially growing cells. Fractions obtained from late exponential-phase or stationary-phase cells have very low activity. 5. The galactosamine content of B. licheniformis N.C.T.C. 6346 cell walls increases during the exponential phase and decreases during the stationary phase.
...
PMID:The cell wall of Bacillus licheniformis N.C.T.C. 6346: Biosynthesis of the teichuronic acid. 1674 46