Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:4.2.2.7 (heparinase)
1,270 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The glomerular basement membrane was subjected to digestion with specific enzymes to determine the chemical nature (sialoglycoproteins, collagenous peptides, or glycosaminoglycans) of the anionic sites previously demonstrated in the laminae rarae. Enzyme digestion was carried out both in situ and in vitro. Kidneys were perfused in situ with enzyme solutions followed by perfusion with fixative containing the cationic dye, ruthenium red, to detect the anionic sites. Glomerular basement membranes were isolated by detergent treatment of glomeruli and incubated with enzyme solutions, followed by incubation with cationized ferritin (pI 7.3-7.5) to label the anionic sites. Only highly purified enzymes free of proteolytic activity were used. The findings were the same both in situ and in vitro. The anionic sites were unaffected by treatment with neuraminidase, chondroitinase ABC, and testicular or leech hyaluronidase. However, they could no longer be demonstrated after digestion with crude heparinase, purified heparitinase, or Pronase or after nitrous acid oxidation. The results demonstrate that the sites contain heparan sulfate since they are removed by treatment with heparitinase and by nitrous acid oxidation-procedures specific for heparan sulfate; and that sialoglycoproteins or other glycosaminoglycans do not represent major components of these sites since the latter are not affected by digestion with neuraminidase and other glycosaminoglycan-specific enzymes. Identical findings were obtained on basement membranes in other locations (Bowman's capsule, tubule epithelium, and endothelium of peritubular capillaries). The presence of heparan sulfate in the glomerular basement membrane is discussed in relation to the charge-selective properties of the glomerular filter and in relation to its potential involvement in various types of glomerular injury.
...
PMID:Presence of heparan sulfate in the glomerular basement membrane. 15 19

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

To evaluate the effect of biochemical modifications not possible in vivo, filters of dog glomerular basement membrane (GBM) were constructed in ultrafiltration cells in vitro. The sieving coefficients (SCs) of three protein markers of differing size and charge (native, anionic bovine albumin-BSA; cationized BSA-cBSA; and immunoglobulin G-IgG) were determined using filters of differing amounts of control GBM, and under varying transmembrane pressures (delta P). Flow rates did not increase proportionately with increasing delta P, indicating filter compressibility. Protein SCs did not change with changing delta P, but did decrease with increasing filter thickness. Control filters showed a small but definite charge selectivity (SCcBSA++ - SCBSA greater than 0); a much greater degree of size selectivity (SCcBSA - SCIgG) was observed. Hexadimethrine (HDM), a polycation which causes proteinuria in vivo, led to marked increases in protein SCs. In contrast, removal of the major population of intrinsic GBM negative charges by carboxyl group methylation only produced a small increase in the filtration of BSA, with no change in filtration of cBSA or IgG. Other biochemical modifications (heparinase or neuraminidase treatment) had no effect on filter permselectivity. Carboxyl group methylation essentially abolished filter binding of cationized ferritin, which showed substantial binding to control filters. These in vitro studies provide confirmatory evidence for a direct effect of HDM on the permselective properties of GBM. In addition, biochemical modification studies suggest a fundamental difference between the binding of an exogenous polycation to GBM anionic sites and the removal of intrinsic charges.
...
PMID:Macromolecular sieving by glomerular basement membrane in vitro: effect of polycation or biochemical modifications. 207 68

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.
...
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

We undertook studies in the isolated perfused rat lung to determine 1) the effects of endothelial charge neutralization with the polycation protamine sulfate on microvascular permeability, lung water, and anionic ferritin binding to the endothelium and 2) the role of heparan sulfate and hyaluronate, negatively charged cell surface glycosaminoglycans, on permeability. Capillary permeability was determined by tissue 125I-albumin accumulation in isolated perfused rat lungs. In control lungs the 5-min albumin uptake was 0.50 +/- 0.05 cm3.s-1.g dry tissue-1 X 10(-3). It was increased by 132 +/- 7.8% (P less than 0.001) by protamine (0.08 mg/ml) and 65 +/- 12% (P less than 0.01) by heparinase (5 U/ml), whereas hyaluronidase (25 NFU/ml) was without effect. In control lungs total water was 4.83 +/- 0.15 ml g/dry tissue. Protamine increased lung water 12 +/- 2% (P less than 0.05). Heparinase caused a 9 +/- 3% increase (P less than 0.05), and hyaluronidase had no effect. Electron microscopy demonstrated that protamine increased anionic ferritin binding to the surface of endothelial cells. We conclude that protamine sulfate neutralization of negative charge in the pulmonary microcirculation leads to increased microvascular permeability. Heparin sulfate may be responsible for this charge effect.
...
PMID:Effects of protamine, heparinase, and hyaluronidase on endothelial permeability and surface charge. 369 32

The polycation hexadimethrine (HDM) binds to anionic sites in the glomerular basement membrane (GBM) and causes heavy proteinuria when infused in vivo. An in vitro assay of 3H-HDM binding to isolated dog GBM was developed, to permit further analysis of the GBM components binding HDM. 3H-HDM binding to isolated GBM was saturable, reversible in dose-dependent fashion by competing polycations, and inhibited by increasing salt concentration and low pH. The pH dependence of binding suggested that most of the HDM binds to carboxyl groups rather than to the sulfate groups of proteoglycans. Removal of heparan sulfate by heparinase or purified heparatinase had no detectable effect on HDM binding. Treatment of GBM with neuraminidase, hyaluronidase, or chondroitinase reduced binding of HDM by a maximum of 20 to 38%. However, substitution of carboxyl anions with nonionizable glycine methyl ester residues resulted in complete elimination of HDM binding. Parallel results were obtained in studies of glomerular localization of cationized ferritin (CatF), pI 8.5. After carboxyl substitution, GBM did not bind CatF; heparinase-treated GBM bound CatF in a distribution not demonstrably different from normal. Cellulose acetate electrophoresis of glycosaminoglycan fractions prepared from treated GBM confirmed that carboxyl modification did not alter the content or charge of the heparan sulfate of GBM, but heparinase treatment removed at least 90% of heparan sulfate. The results indicate that carboxyl groups are quantitatively more important than heparan sulfate for binding of HDM in vitro. Since HDM causes proteinuria in vivo, carboxyl groups may be important for maintenance of normal permselectivity.
...
PMID:Polycation binding to glomerular basement membrane. Effect of biochemical modification. 380 16

The luminal surfaces of the endothelium lining the two surfaces of the aortic arterial (AAR) and ventricular (AVT), and mitral ventricular (MVT) and atrial (MAT), valve cusps were studied with cationic ferritin (CF) and ferritin (Fer)-conjugated lectins (WGA, RCA, SBA). The arterial (AAR) and ventricular (MVT) surfaces of the aortic and mitral cusps, which are exposed to more turbulent fluid mechanical forces and lower wall shear stresses, had the greatest density of CF labeling. The endothelia of the four surfaces displayed a gradient of decreasing density from the nuclear region to the periphery. Neuraminidase, chondroitinase ABC and AC, heparinase, heparitinase, hyaluronidase (testicular), and pronase E digestions suggested that a significant number of the anionic sites labeled by CF are associated with sialoglycoproteins and glycosaminoglycans such as chondroitin 4/6 sulfates, dermatan sulfates, and heparan sulfates. The localization of WGA receptors on the endothelium of AAR and MVT demonstrated a greater density of sialyl moieties than on the AVT and MAT. There was no binding of Fer-RCA with specificity for D-galactopyranosides or Fer-SBA with affinity for N-acetylglucosamine and D-galactose to the endothelium unless it was first treated with neuraminidase. Hence, sialic acids are shown to be among the more superficial components of this glycocalyx and to be largely responsible for the greater densities over the endothelium of AAR and MVT.
...
PMID:Anionic surface properties of aortic and mitral valve endothelium from New Zealand white rabbits. 384 Jun 42

Glomerular development was studied in the newborn rat kidney by electron microscopy and cytochemistry. Glomerular structure at different developmental stages was related to the permeability properties of its components and to the differentiation of anionic sites in the glomerular basement membrane (GBM) and on endothelial and epithelia cell surfaces. Cationic probes (cationized ferritin, ruthenium red, colloidal iron) were used to determine the time of appearance and distribution of anionic sites, and digestion with specific enzymes (neuraminidase, heparinase, chondroitinases, hyaluronidases) was used to determine their nature. Native (anionic) ferritin was used to investigate glomerular permeability. The main findings were: (a) The first endothelial fenestrae (which appear before the GBM is fully assembled) possess transient, negatively charged diaphragms that bind cationized ferritin and are impermeable to native ferritin. (b). Two types of glycosaminoglycan particles can be identified by staining with ruthenium red. Large (30-nm) granules are seen only in the cleft of the S-shaped body at the time of mesenchymal migration into the renal vesicle. They consist of hyaluronic acid and possibly also chondroitin sulfate. Smaller (10-15-nm) particles are seen in the earliest endothelial and epithelial basement membranes (S-shaped body stage), become concentrated in the laminae rarae after fusion of these two membranes to form the GBM, and contain heparan sulfate. They are assumed to be precursors of the heparan sulfate-rich granules present in the mature GBM. (c) Distinctive sialic acid-rich, and sialic acid-poor plasmalemmal domains have been delineated on both the epithelial and endothelial cell surfaces. (d) The appearance of sialoglycoproteins on the epithelial cell surface concides with the development of foot processes and filtration slits. (e) Initially the GBM is loosely organized and quite permeable to native ferritin ;it becomes increasinly impermeable to ferritin as the lamina densa becomes more compact. (f) The number of endothelial fenestrae and open epithelial slits increases as the GBM matures and becomes organized into an effective barrier to the passage of native ferritin.
...
PMID:Assembly of the glomerular filtration surface. Differentiation of anionic sites in glomerular capillaries of newborn rat kidney. 615 76

Teratocarcinoma-derived endodermal PYS-2 cells are known to synthesize an extracellular matrix containing the basement membrane molecules laminin, type IV collagen, and heparan sulfate proteoglycan as major constituents (I. Leivo, K. Alitalo, L. Risteli, A. Vaheri, R. Timpl, J. Wartiovaara, Exp Cell Res 137:15-23, 1982). Immunoferritin techniques with specific antibodies were used in the present study to define the ultrastructural localization of the above constituents in the fibrillar network. Laminin was detected in matrix network adjacent to the basal cell membrane and in protruding matrix fibrils that connect the matrix to the cell membrane. Ruthenium red-stainable heparinase-sensitive 10- to 20-nm particles were often present at the junction of the attachment fibrils and the matrix network, or along the attachment fibrils. A corresponding distribution of ferritin label was observed for basement membrane heparan sulfate proteoglycan. Type IV collagen was found in the matrix network but not in the attachment fibrils. The results suggest that the PYS-2 cells are connected to their pericellular matrix by fibrils containing laminin associated with heparan sulfate-containing particles. These results may also have relevance for the attachment of epithelial cells to basement membranes.
...
PMID:Basement membrane-like matrix of teratocarcinoma-derived endodermal cells: presence of laminin and heparan sulfate in the matrix at points of attachment to cells. 618 2

Glomerular basement membranes (GBM's) were subjected to digestion in situ with glycosaminoglycan-degrading enzymes to assess the effect of removing glycosaminoglycans (GAG) on the permeability of the GBM to native ferritin (NF). Kidneys were digested by perfusion with enzyme solutions followed by perfusion with NF. In controls treated with buffer alone, NF was seen in high concentration in the capillary lumina, but the tracer did not penetrate to any extent beyond the lamina rara interna (LRI) of the GBM, and litte or no NF reached the urinary spaces. Findings in kidneys perfused with Streptomyces hyaluronidase (removes hyaluronic acid) and chondroitinase-ABC (removes hyaluronic acid, chondroitin 4- and 6-sulfates, and dermatan sulfate, but not heparan sulfate) were the same as in controls. In kidneys digested with heparinase (which removes most GAG including heparan sulfate), NF penetrated the GBM in large amounts and reached the urinary spaces. Increased numbers of tracer molecules were found in the lamina densa (LD) and lamina rara externa (LRE) of the GBM. In control kidneys perfused with cationized ferritin (CF), CF bound to heparan-sulfate rich sites demonstrated previously in the laminae rarae; however, no CF binding was seen in heparinase-digested GBM's, confirming that the sites had been removed by the enzyme treatment. The results demonstrated that removal of heparan sulfate (but not other GAG) leads to a dramatic increase in the permeability of the GBM to NF.
...
PMID:Increased permeability of the glomerular basement membrane to ferritin after removal of glycosaminoglycans (heparan sulfate) by enzyme digestion. 644 56


1 2 Next >>