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1.
1. Proteoglycans extracted from human and equine glomerular basement membranes (GBM) were purified by ion-exchange chromatography and gel filtration. 2. The glycoconjugates had an apparent molecular mass of 200-400 kDa and consisted of 75% protein and 25% glycosaminoglycan. Glycosidase and HNO2 treatment and the amino sugar and sulfate composition of both proteoglycan preparations identified heparan sulfate (HS) as the predominant saccharide chain. 3. Hydrolysis with trifluoromethanesulfonic acid yielded comparable core proteins with molecular masses of ca 160 and 120 kDa. 4. The HS chains had an apparent molecular mass of 18 kDa. Results of heparitinase digestion and HNO2-treatment indicated a clustering of sulfate groups in the distal part of the HS side chains. 5. Peptide mapping after trypsin, clostripain or V8 protease digestion of radiolabeled human and equine heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPG) preparations with three different separation techniques showed large differences. 6. Polyclonal antisera raised against the HSPGs reacted against the core proteins. Both HSPG preparations and their antisera showed ca 40% cross-reactivity. About 50% of monoclonal antisera elicited against one HSPG preparation showed reaction with both HSPG preparations. 7. Polyclonal antisera stained all basement membranes in an intense linear fashion in indirect immunofluorescence studies of kidney sections from horse, man and various mammalian species. 8. Biochemical and immunological data indicate that HSPGs from equine and human GBM have a comparable structure, but the core proteins differ considerably.  相似文献   

2.
Heparan sulfate proteoglycan (HSPG) was extracted from human tubular basement membrane (TBM) with guanidine and purified by ion-exchange chromatography and gel filtration. The glycoconjugate was sensitive to heparitinase and resistant to chondroitinase ABC, had an apparent molecular mass of 200-400 kDa and consisted of 70% protein and 30% glycosaminoglycan. The amino acid composition was characterized by its high content of glycine, proline, alanine and glutamic acid. Hydrolysis with trifluoromethanesulfonic acid yielded core proteins of 160 and 110 kDa. The heparan sulfate (HS) chains obtained after alkaline NaBH4 treatment had a molecular mass of about 18 kDa. Results of heparitinase digestion and HNO2 treatment suggest a clustering of sulfate groups in the distal portion of the HS side chains. These chemical data are comparable to those obtained previously on glomerular basement membrane (GBM) HSPG (Van den Heuvel et al. (1989) Biochem. J. 264, 457-465). Peptide patterns obtained after trypsin, clostripain or V8 protease digestion of TBM and GBM HSPG preparations showed a large similarity. Polyclonal antisera and a panel of monoclonal antibodies raised against both HSPG preparations and directed against the core protein showed complete cross-reactivity in ELISA and on Western blots. They stained all basement membranes in an intense linear fashion in indirect immunofluorescence studies on human kidneys. Based on these biochemical and immunological data we conclude that HSPGs from human GBM and TBM are identical, or at least very closely related, proteins.  相似文献   

3.
Proteoglycans, metabolically labelled with [3H]leucine and 35SO4(2-), were isolated from the spent media and from guanidinium chloride extracts of cultured human umbilical-vein endothelial cells by using isopycnic density-gradient centrifugation, gel filtration and ion-exchange h.p.l.c. The major proteoglycan species were subjected to SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis before and after enzymic degradation of the polysaccharide chains. The cell extract contained mainly a heparan sulphate proteoglycan that has a buoyant density of 1.31 g/ml and a protein core with apparent molecular mass 300 kDa. The latter was heterogeneous and migrated as one major and one minor band. After reduction, the apparent molecular mass of the major band increased to approx. 350 kDa, indicating the presence of intrachain disulphide bonds. The proteoglycan binds to octyl-Sepharose and its polysaccharide chains are extensively degraded by heparan sulphate lyase. The proteoglycans of the medium contained 90% of all the incorporated 35SO4(2-). Here the predominant heparan sulphate proteoglycan was similar to that of the cell extract, but was more heterogeneous and contained an additional core protein with apparent molecular mass 210 kDa. Furthermore, two different chondroitin sulphate proteoglycans were found: one 200 kDa species with a high buoyant density (approx. 1.45 g/ml) and one 100 kDa species with low buoyant density (approx. 1.3 g/ml). Both these proteoglycans have a core protein of molecular mass approx. 47 kDa.  相似文献   

4.
Heparan sulfate proteoglycan from the L2 rat yolk sac carcinoma has been purified and partially characterized. The proteoglycan has an apparent Mr of 750 000, 35% of which represents the core protein. The core protein seems to be homogeneous, whereas the heparan sulfate chains are heterogeneous with an Mr of about 50 000-70 000, with 30% of the glucosamine being N-sulfated. Antibodies raised against the core protein of the heparan sulfate proteoglycan reacted with basement membranes of various rat and human tissue.  相似文献   

5.
The mouse teratocarcinoma cell line HR9 was investigated for proteoheparan sulphate production. Four species of proteoheparan sulphate molecules were isolated and purified to homogeneity. The proteoheparan sulphate isolated from the tissue-culture medium contains four heparan sulphate side-chains of 25 kDa each, and its core protein has an approximate molecular mass of 50 kDa. The proteoheparan sulphates associated with the cells were separated into three individual species: cell proteoheparan sulphate I exhibits structural characteristics which are very similar to the proteoheparan sulphate isolated from the tissue culture medium; cell proteoheparan sulphates II and III contain one heparan sulphate chain of 25 kDa and 20 kDa, and core proteins of approximately 30 kDa and 25 kDa respectively. Antisera, raised against the medium form, react specifically with basement membranes in various tissues by immunofluorescence. This staining pattern was compared to the pattern observed with an antiserum which we have obtained to a proteoheparan sulphate species isolated from the plasma membrane of bovine aortic endothelial cells. The structural and immunological data suggest that basement membrane and plasma membrane proteoheparan sulphates are different biosynthetic products and are not directly related to each other.  相似文献   

6.
Here we present evidence that a fibroblast heparan sulphate proteoglycan of approx. 300 kDa and with a core protein of apparent molecular mass 70 kDa is covalently linked to the plasma membranevia a linkage structure involving phosphatidylinositol. Phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C releases such a heparan sulphate proteoglycan only from cells labelled with [35S]sulphate in the absence of serum. Cell cultures labelled with [3H]myo-inositol in the absence or presence of serum produce a radiolabelled heparan sulphate proteoglycan which was purified by gel-permeation chromatography and ion-exchange chromatography on MonoQ. Digestion with heparan sulphate lyase and analysis by gel-permeation chromatography and sodium dodecylsulphate-polyacrylamide gel-electrophoresis revealed that the3H-label is associated with a core protein of apparent mass 70 kDa.  相似文献   

7.
The extracellular matrix of cultured human lung fibroblasts contains one major heparan sulfate proteoglycan. This proteoglycan contains a 400-kDa core protein and is structurally and immunochemically identical or closely related to the heparan sulfate proteoglycans that occur in basement membranes. Because heparitinase does not release the core protein from the matrix of cultured cells, we investigated the binding interactions of this heparan sulfate proteoglycan with other components of the fibroblast extracellular matrix. Both the intact proteoglycan and the heparitinase-resistant core protein were found to bind to fibronectin. The binding of 125I-labeled core protein to immobilized fibronectin was inhibited by soluble fibronectin and by soluble cold core protein but not by albumin or gelatin. A Scatchard plot indicates a Kd of about 2 x 10(-9) M. Binding of the core protein was also inhibited by high concentrations of heparin, heparan sulfate, or chrondroitin sulfate and was sensitive to high salt concentrations. Thermolysin fragmentation of the 125I-labeled proteoglycan yielded glycosamino-glycan-free core protein fragments of approximately 110 and 62 kDa which bound to both fibronectin and heparin columns. The core protein-binding capacity of fibronectin was very sensitive to proteolysis. Analysis of thermolytic and alpha-chymotryptic fragments of fibronectin showed binding of the intact proteoglycan and of its isolated core protein to a protease-sensitive fragment of 56 kDa which carried the gelatin-binding domain of fibronectin and to a protease-sensitive heparin-binding fragment of 140 kDa. Based on the NH2-terminal amino acid sequence analyses of the 56- and 140-kDa fragments, the core protein-binding domain in fibronectin was tentatively mapped in the area of overlap of the two fragments, carboxyl-terminally from the gelatin-binding domain, possibly in the second type III repeat of fibronectin. These data document a specific and high affinity interaction between fibronectin and the core protein of the matrix heparan sulfate proteoglycan which may anchor the proteoglycan in the matrix.  相似文献   

8.
A minor low-sulphated dermatan sulphate proteoglycan was isolated from ray skin by extraction with 2% sodium dodecyl sulphate, followed with ion-exchange chromatography, gel chromatography and density gradient centrifugation. The proteoglycan with a relative molecular mass (Mr) ranging from 70 to 120 kDa is composed of about two dermatan sulphate chains (Mr 33 kDa) bound on a protein core of Mr 27 kDa, and oligosaccharides consisting of uronic acids, hexosamines and neutral sugars. The major amino acids of the protein core were glycine (corresponding to about one-fourth of the total amino acids), serine, threonine, glutamic acid/glutamine, leucine and cysteine, together amounting to 56% of the total. The isolated proteoglycan does not interact with hyaluronic acid and does not form self-aggregates. Dermatan sulphate was rich in iduronic acid (62% of total uronic acid) and composed of non-sulphated (44%), and mono-sulphated disaccharides bearing esterified sulphate groups at positions C-4 (53%) or C-6 (3%) of the N-acetyl galactosamine. HPLC analysis of a pure preparation of dermatan sulphate, showed the presence of galactose and glucose possibly as branches on the dermatan sulphate chain.  相似文献   

9.
A large heparan sulfate proteoglycan of low buoyant density (p = 1.32 to 1.40 g/cm3 in 6 M-guanidine.HCl) was extracted from a tumor basement membrane with denaturing solvents and purified by chromatography and CsCl gradient centrifugation. Chemical, immunological, physical and electron microscopical analyses have demonstrated a high degree of purity and have allowed us to propose a structural model for this proteoglycan. It is composed of an 80 nm long protein core formed from a single polypeptide chain (Mr about 500,000) with intrachain disulfide bonds. This core is folded into a row of six globular domains of variable size as shown by electron microscopy after rotary shadowing and negative staining. A multidomain structure was confirmed by protease digestion experiments that allowed the isolation of a single heparan sulfate-containing peptide segment representing less than 5% of the total mass of the protein core. Electron microscopy has visualized generally three heparan sulfate chains in each molecule close to each other at one pole of the protein core. The molecular mass and length (100 to 170 nm) of the heparan sulfate chains were found to vary consistently between different preparations. The mass per length ratio (350 nm-1) indicated an extended conformation for the heparan sulfate side-chains. These structural features are distinctly different from those of the high density proteoglycan, suggesting that both forms of basement membrane heparan sulfate proteoglycan are genetically distinct and not derived from a common precursor.  相似文献   

10.
We have isolated from the conditioned medium of an established endothelial cell line a heparan sulphate proteoglycan whose involvement in the inhibition of the extrinsic coagulation pathway was reported in previous studies [Colburn & Buonassisi (1982) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 104, 220-227]. The proteoglycan was purified by gel filtration and ion-exchange chromatography, and appears to be free of contaminating proteins as determined by polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis of the radioiodinated protein core before and after removal of the glycosaminoglycan chains by treatment with heparitinase. By this procedure the Mr of the protein core was estimated to be 22000. The N-terminal end was sequenced up to amino acid 25. The 21st residue is likely to be glycosylated. Analysis of the purified proteoglycan by gel-filtration chromatography yielded Kd values of 0.2 for the whole molecule and 0.35 for the glycosaminoglycan chains. The structure that emerges from these data is that of a heparan sulphate proteoglycan characterized by a relatively small protein core and few glycosaminoglycan chains.  相似文献   

11.
Kleinschmidt spreading, negative staining, and rotary shadowing were used to examine the large form of (basement membrane) heparan sulfate proteoglycan in the electron microscope. Heparan sulfate proteoglycan was visualized as consisting of two parts: the core protein and, emerging from one end of the core protein, the glycosaminoglycan side chains. The core protein usually appeared as an S-shaped rod with about six globules along its length. Similar characteristics were observed in preparations of core protein in which the side chains had been removed by heparitinase treatment ("400-kDa core") as well as in a 200-kDa trypsin fragment ("P200") derived from one end of the core protein. The core protein was sensitive to lyophilization and apparently also to the method of examination, being condensed following Kleinschmidt spreading (length means = 52 nm) and extended following negative staining (length means = 83 nm) or rotary shadowing (length means = 87 nm; 400-kDa core length means = 80 nm; P200 length means = 44 nm). Two or three glycosaminoglycan side chains (length means = 146 +/- 53 nm) were attached to one end of the core protein. The side chains often appeared tangled or to merge together as one. Thus, the large heparan sulfate proteoglycan from basement membrane is an asymmetrical molecule with a core protein containing globular domains and terminally attached side chains. This structure is in keeping with that previously predicted by enzymatic digestions and with the proposed orientation in basement membranes, i.e., the core protein bound in the lamina densa and the heparan sulfate side chains in the lamina lucida arranged along the surface of the basement membranes.  相似文献   

12.
A protein with a molecular mass of 19 kDa has been purified to homogeneity from 11-day-old chick embryos using a procedure involving chromatography on heparin - Sepharose, immunoaffinity resin and C4 reversed-phase. Indirect immunofluorescence studies, using polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies raised against this protein, indicate that it is essentially localized within the basement membranes in early embryonic tissues. After the 18th day of embryonic life and in post-hatched chicken, this protein could only be detected in some eye basement membranes. It appears to be bound to heparan sulfate chains of the proteoglycan present in these structures. Thus, the protein exhibits similar properties to those previously described for fibroblast growth factors (FGF), such as heparin affinity, molecular mass and localization in the basement membranes. In contrast, this protein is present in much larger amounts than FGFs, at least in 11-day-old embryos. Furthermore, the first 17 amino acid residues of the N-terminal sequence show that it does not strictly correspond to any previously described protein.  相似文献   

13.
Heparan sulphate and chondroitin/dermatan sulphate proteoglycans of human skin fibroblasts were isolated and separated after metabolic labelling for 48 h with 35SO4(2-) and/or [3H]leucine. The proteoglycans were obtained from the culture medium, from a detergent extract of the cells and from the remaining ''matrix'', and purified by using density-gradient centrifugation, gel and ion-exchange chromatography. The core proteins of the various proteoglycans were identified by electrophoresis in SDS after enzymic removal of the glycosaminoglycan side chains. Skin fibroblasts produce a number of heparan sulphate proteoglycans, with core proteins of apparent molecular masses 350, 250, 130, 90, 70, 45 and possibly 35 kDa. The major proteoglycan is that with the largest core, and it is principally located in the matrix. A novel proteoglycan with a 250 kDa core is almost entirely secreted or shed into the culture medium. Two exclusively cell-associated proteoglycans with 90 kDa core proteins, one with heparan sulphate and another novel one with chondroitin/dermatan sulphate, were also identified. The heparan sulphate proteoglycan with the 70 kDa core was found both in the cell layer and in the medium. In a previous study [Fransson, Carlstedt, Cöster & Malmström (1984) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 81, 5657-5661] it was suggested that skin fibroblasts produce a proteoglycan form of the transferrin receptor. However, the core protein of the major heparan sulphate proteoglycan now purified does not resemble this receptor, nor does it bind transferrin. The principal secreted proteoglycans are the previously described large chondroitin sulphate proteoglycan (PG-L) and the small dermatan sulphate proteoglycans (PG-S1 and PG-S2).  相似文献   

14.
Confluent adult and fetal human glomerular epithelial cells were incubated for 24 h in the presence of [3H]-amino acids and [35S]sulfate. Two heparan-35SO4 proteoglycans were released into the culture medium. These 35S-labeled proteoglycans eluted as a single peak from anion exchange chromatographic columns, but were separable by gel filtration on Sepharose CL-6B columns. The larger heparan-35SO4 proteoglycan eluted with the column void volume and at a Kav of 0.26 from Sepharose CL-4B columns. The most abundant medium heparan-35SO4 proteoglycan was a high buoyant density proteoglycan similar in hydrodynamic size (Sepharose CL-6B Kav 0.23) to those previously described in glomerular basement membranes and isolated glomeruli. Heparan-35SO4 chains from both proteoglycans were 36 kDa. A smaller proportion of Sepharose CL-6B excluded dermatan-35SO4 proteoglycan was also synthesized by these cells. The predominant protein cores of both medium heparan-35SO4 proteoglycans were approximately 230 and 180 kDa. A hybrid chondroitin/dermatan-heparan-35SO4 proteoglycan with an 80-kDa protein core copurified with the smaller medium heparan-35SO4 proteoglycan. This 35S-labeled proteoglycan appeared as a diffuse, chondroitinase ABC sensitive 155-kDa fluorographic band in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels after the Sepharose CL-6B Kav 0.23 35S-labeled proteoglycan fraction was digested with heparitinase. The heparitinase generated heparan sulfate proteoglycan protein cores and the 155-kDa hybrid proteoglycan fragment had molecular weights similar to those previously identified in rat glomerular basement membrane and glomeruli using antibodies against a basement membrane tumor proteoglycan precursor (Klein et al. J. Cell Biol. 106, 963-970, 1988). Thus, human glomerular epithelial cells in culture are capable of synthesizing, processing, and releasing heparan sulfate proteoglycans which are similar to those synthesized in vivo and found in the glomerular basement membrane. These proteoglycans may belong to a family of related basement membrane proteoglycans.  相似文献   

15.
A proteoglycan isolated from plasma membranes of an ascites hepatoma, AH 66, was characterized structurally. The glycosaminoglycan was obtained by alkali treatment and was identified as heparan sulfate. It was essentially the only type of carbohydrate chain attached to the core protein. The identification was based on chemical analysis, electrophoresis, and digestibility with heparitinase from Flavobacterium heparinum. Analysis of neutral sugars of the proteoglycan by mass fragmentography indicated the presence of xylose and galactose which should be involved in the linkage region between a heparan sulfate chain and the core protein. The weight-average molecular weights of the proteoglycan and its heparan sulfate chain were determined to be 71,000 and 21,000, respectively, by meniscus depletion equilibrium centrifugation. The latter value was in good agreement with those obtained by chemical analysis and by gel filtration. From these values for molecular weight and the protein content of the proteoglycan (10.6%), the molecular weight of the core protein was estimated to be 7500. On the basis of these molecular parameters, it was proposed that three heparan sulfate chains on average are linked to the core protein.  相似文献   

16.
The effect of nitrophenyl-beta-D-xyloside (xyloside), a synthetic initiator of glycosaminoglycan synthesis, on proteoglycan and glycosaminoglycan synthesis by a basement membrane producing tumor was studied. While xyloside markedly stimulated the formation of chondroitin sulfate chains, it depressed the formation of a basement membrane heparan sulfate proteoglycan and caused only little formation of free heparan sulfate chains. However, when the synthesis of the core protein of the proteoglycan was inhibited by cycloheximide, heparan sulfate chains were produced by xyloside treatment. These heparan sulfate chains had a sulfate content higher than that of heparan sulfate found on the proteoglycan. The data indicate that xyloside can substitute for the heparan sulfate initiation site on the core protein of the proteoglycan and that this initiation is enhanced in the absence of core protein. This suggests that under normal conditions the formation of heparan sulfate chains may be tightly linked to the production of the core protein.  相似文献   

17.
Human lung fibroblasts produce heparan sulphate proteoglycans (HSPG) that are associated with the plasma membrane. A monoclonal-antibody (Mab)-secreting hybridoma, S1, was produced by fusion of SP 2/0-AG 14 mouse myeloma cells with spleen cells from mice immunized with partially purified cellular HSPG fractions. The HSPG character of the material carrying the epitope recognized by Mab S1 was demonstrated by: (i) the co-purification of the S1 epitope with the membrane HSPG of human lung fibroblasts; (ii) the decrease in size of the material carrying the S1 epitope upon treatment with heparinase or heparitinase, and the resistance of this material to heparinase treatment after N-desulphation. The S1 epitope appears to be part of the core protein, since it was destroyed by proteinase treatment and by disulphide-bond reduction, but not by treatments that depolymerize the glycosaminoglycan chains and N-linked oligosaccharide chains. Polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis of non-reduced heparitinase-digested membrane HSPG followed by Western blotting and immunostaining with Mab S1 revealed a single band with apparent molecular mass of 64 kDa. Membrane proteoglycans isolated from detergent extracts or from 4 M-guanidinium chloride extracts of the cells yielded similar results. Additional digestion with N-glycanase lowered the apparent molecular mass of the immunoreactive material to 56 kDa, suggesting that the core protein also carries N-linked oligosaccharides. Fractionation of 125I-labelled membrane HSPG by immuno-affinity chromatography on immobilized Mab S1, followed by heparitinase digestion and polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis of the bound material, yielded a single labelled band with apparent molecular mass 64 kDa. Treatment with dithiothreitol caused a slight increase in apparent molecular mass, suggesting that the core protein of this membrane proteoglycan of a single subunit containing (an) intrachain disulphide bond(s).  相似文献   

18.
The secretion of heparan sulphate by cultured rat hepatocytes was increased in the presence of (+)-catechin. The increase was due to a new species of heparan sulphate that lacked the carbohydrate-protein linkage between xylose and serine in normal heparan sulphate proteoglycan. The mean molecular weight of this heparan sulphate varied between 6300 and 9500, was not affected by treatment with alkali or Pronase and was 2-3-fold lower than that of chains released from heparan sulphate proteoglycan. After digestion with Pronase, only a minor fraction of chains contained serine, and after treatment with alkali and NaB3H4 reduction less than 5% of the chains exposed [3H]xylitol at the reducing terminals. These results suggested that (+)-catechin or metabolites of it acted as acceptors of heparan sulphate synthesis. In cultures treated wih cycloheximide, synthesis of heparan sulphate decreased to less than 5%. (+)-Catechin could restore the heparan sulphate synthesis to almost normal values. The (+)-catechin-induced heparan sulphate was secreted. Only a small fraction was incorporated into the plasma membrane or other cellular compartments. This may indicate that the protein core is essential for association of heparan sulphate with cellular compartments.  相似文献   

19.
1. The structure of chondroitin/dermatan and heparan-sulphate chains from various proteoglycan populations derived from cultured human skin fibroblasts have been examined. Confluent cell cultures were biosynthetically labelled with [3H]-glucosamine and 35SO4(2-), and proteoglycans were purified according to buoyant density, size and charge density [Schmidtchen, A., Carlstedt, I., Malmstr?m, A. & Fransson, L.-A. (1990) Biochem. J. 265, 289-300]. Some proteoglycan fractions were further fractionated according to hydrophobicity on octyl-Sepharose in Triton X-100 gradients. The glycosaminoglycan chains, intact or degraded by chemical or enzymic methods were then analysed by gel chromatography on Sepharose CL-6B, Bio-Gel P-6, ion exchange HPLC and gel electrophoresis. 2. Three types of dermatan-sulphate chains were identified on the basis of disaccharide composition and chain length. They were derived from the large proteoglycan, two small proteoglycans and a cell-associated proteoglycan with core proteins of 90 kDa and 45 kDa. Intracellular, free dermatan-sulphate chains were very similar to those of the small proteoglycans. 3. Heparan-sulphate chains from different proteoglycans had, in spite of small but distinct differences in size, strikingly similar compositional features. They contained similar amounts of D-glucuronate, L-iduronate (with or without sulphate) and N-sulphate groups. They all displayed heparin-lyase-resistant domains with average molecular mass of 10-15 kDa. The heparan-sulphate chains from proteoglycans with 250-kDa and 350-kDa cores were the largest greater than 50 kDa), containing an average of four or five domains, in contrast to heparan-sulphate chains from the small heparan-sulphate proteoglycans which had average molecular mass of 45 kDa and consisted of three or four such domains. Free, cell-associated heparan-sulphate chains were heterogeneous in size (5-45 kDa). 4. These results suggest that the core protein may have important regulatory functions with regard to dermatan-sulphate synthesis. On the other hand, synthesis of heparan sulphate may be largely controlled by the cell that expresses a particular proteoglycan core protein.  相似文献   

20.
Primary cultures of rat hepatocytes maintained as monolayer in a serum-free medium synthesise and secrete sulphated proteoglycans. Nearly 5% of the total 35(S)-sulphated material was obtained in a soluble form from beneath the cell layer. A shift in gel filtration pattern on beta-elimination with alkali suggested that it is a sulphated proteoglycan. On ion exchange chromatography over Dowex AG 1 x 2, the major fraction was eluted with 1.25 M NaCl. Further, nearly 80% of the 35(S)-labeled material was susceptible to nitrous acid degradation and more than 90% of the material was resistant to chondroitinase ABC digestion suggesting that it is predominantly a heparan sulphate proteoglycan (HSPG). Since HSPG is a major component of basement membrane, its binding with collagen was studied by a solid phase binding assay. About 75% of the 35(S) HSPG bound to wells coated with type IV collagen whereas only about 20% bound to type I collagen at physiological pH. Binding to collagen IV was reduced by about 50% when free GAG chains were used indicating that the protein core is also involved in interaction with the collagen. These results indicate the possible role of this basal extracellular heparan sulphate proteoglycan in the basal lamina formation.  相似文献   

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