Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Enzyme
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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)
Two N-terminal ends of
human type XVIII collagen
chains have recently been identified. The two chains have different signal peptides and variant N-terminal noncollagenous NC1 domains of 493 (NC1-493) and 303 (NC1-303) amino acid residues, respectively, but share 301 residues of their NC1 domains as well as the collagenous and C-terminal noncollagenous portions of the molecule. Antibodies were produced against the NC1 region common to both human alpha1(XVIII) chain variants and against NC1 sequences specific to the long variant and were used in combination with in situ hybridization to localize this collagen in a number of human tissues. They were also used for Western blotting, which resulted in detection of overlapping high-molecular weight bands above the 200-kd standard in a kidney extract.
Heparin lyase
II and
heparin lyase
III digestions of kidney and placenta extracts indicated that at least in these tissues,
type XVIII collagen
contains heparin sulfate glycosaminoglycan side chains. Type XVIII collagen was found to be a ubiquitous basement membrane component, occurring prominently at vascular and epithelial basement membranes throughout the body. Comparison of the expression of the NC1-493 and NC1-303 variants revealed marked differences. The short variant was found in most conventional basement membranes, including blood vessels and the various epithelial structures, and around muscular structures. The long variant was expressed very strongly in liver, where it was virtually the only variant in the liver sinusoids, and it occurred only in minor amounts elsewhere. Thus, the 192 N-terminal residues specific to the long variant apparently confer some functional property needed above all in the liver sinusoids, but also at certain other locations.
...
PMID:The short and long forms of type XVIII collagen show clear tissue specificities in their expression and location in basement membrane zones in humans. 970 20
PTPsigma is a receptor tyrosine phosphatase that is expressed widely in the developing nervous system and that controls the growth and retinotopic mapping of retinal axons. PTPsigma is also expressed in motor neurons where its function is unclear. Given that invertebrate relatives of PTPsigma can control motor axon guidance, target contact, and synaptogenesis, we have asked if extracellular ligands exist for cPTPsigma, the avian PTPsigma orthologue, in the neuromuscular system. Of the two major isoforms cPTPsigma1 and cPTPsigma2, only the shorter cPTPsigma1 isoform is expressed in developing spinal motor neurons and their axons. We show that ectodomains of cPTPsigma1, but not of cPTPsigma2, bind specifically to developing skeletal myotubes. The putative myotube ligand is not related to the previously described binding of cPTPsigma to heparan sulfates within the proteoglycans agrin and
collagen XVIII
, since
heparinase
treatment of myotubes does not alter cPTPsigma1 binding and since most mutations that abolish binding of cPTPsigma1 to heparin do not affect myotube binding. The expression of cPTPsigma1 in motor axons and its direct binding to target myotubes suggest an isoform-specific role for axonally expressed cPTPsigma1 during establishment or maintenance of neuromuscular contacts.
...
PMID:Isoform-specific binding of the tyrosine phosphatase PTPsigma to a ligand in developing muscle. 1259 37
Endostatin is a naturally occurring proteolytic fragment of the C-terminal domain of
collagen XVIII
. It inhibits angiogenesis by a mechanism that appears to involve binding to HS (heparan sulphate). We have examined the molecular interaction between
endostatin
and HS from micro- and macrovessel endothelial cells. Two discrete panels of oligosaccharides were prepared from metabolically radiolabelled HS, using digestion with either
heparinase
I or III, and then examined for their
endostatin
affinity using a sensitive filter-binding assay. Two types of
endostatin
-binding regions were identified: one comprising sulphated domains of five or more disaccharides in length, enriched in 6-O-sulphate groups, and the other contained long
heparinase
I-resistant fragments. In the latter case, evidence from the present study suggests that the binding region encompasses a sulphated domain fragment and a transition zone of intermediate sulphation. The contribution to binding of specific O-sulphate groups was determined using selectively desulphated HS species, namely HS from Hs2st-/- mutant cells, and by comparing the compositions of
endostatin
-binding and non-binding oligosaccharides. The results indicate that 6-O-sulphates play a dominant role in site selectivity and 2-O-sulphates are not strictly essential.
...
PMID:Binding of endostatin to endothelial heparan sulphate shows a differential requirement for specific sulphates. 1281 20