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1.
A technique is presented for the preparation of three major proteoglycans from 14-day embryonic chicken retinas following their culture overnight with [35S]sulfate and either [3H]glucosamine or [3H]serine. Homogenization of the tissue in saline permitted extraction of heterogeneous soluble proteoglycans separately from most of the heparan sulfate proteoglycans. The latter were extracted from the 140,000g pellet with 0.5% Triton X-100 in 8 M urea. The medium plus the saline and urea-detergent extracts were separated from low-molecular-weight contaminants, and fractionated into two peaks of radioactivity on Sephacryl S-300 in saline with 3 M urea and 0.5% Triton X-100. The proteoglycans were isolated directly from these fractions on DEAE-Sephacel, and subjected to ultrafiltration concentration and then further purification on cesium chloride density gradient centrifugation in 4 M guanidine hydrochloride. A further step involving cetylpyridinium chloride precipitation was examined, but it resulted in essentially no further purification. The fractionations separated a large chondroitin sulfate/dermatan sulfate proteoglycan from the culture medium that was excluded from S-300 and of low buoyant density; a large heparan sulfate proteoglycan from the urea-detergent extract that was also excluded from S-300 and of low buoyant density; and two smaller and possibly related heparan sulfate proteoglycans. One was found in the medium and showed low to intermediate buoyant density; the other was isolated from the urea-detergent extract and showed a significantly higher buoyant density, associated with a lower protein content. The saline extract contained both of the two larger proteoglycans and only minor amounts of the smaller molecules.  相似文献   

2.
Link proteins are glycoproteins which stabilize aggregates of proteoglycans and hyaluronic acid in cartilage. We recently identified link proteins in canine synovial cell cultures. We now find that link proteins and proteoglycans extracted from these cells under dissociative conditions sediment in the high-buoyant-density fractions of an associative cesium chloride density gradient, suggesting that link proteins interact with high-bouyant-density proteoglycans. In gradients containing [35S]sulfate-labeled synovial cell extracts, 76% of the labeled sulfate and 54% of the uronic acid is found in the high-buoyant-density fractions. Under associative conditions, Sepharose 2B elution profiles of the crude synovial cell extract, synovial cell high-buoyant-density fractions, and culture medium indicate that synovial cell proteoglycans are present in monomeric form, rather than in aggregates. Synovial cell link proteins co-elute with the [35S]sulfate-labeled material under the same conditions. These proteoglycans do not interact in vitro with exogenous hyaluronic acid. Dermatan sulfate, chondroitin sulfate and heparan sulfate are the major cell-associated sulfated glycosaminoglycans synthesized by cultured canine synovial cells, while hyaluronic acid is found in the culture medium. Although the proteoglycans synthesized by cultured synovial cells interact with link proteins, these data indicate that they do not interact with hyaluronic acid to form aggregates.  相似文献   

3.
We have isolated and characterized the cell-associated and secreted proteoglycans synthesized by a clonal line of rat adrenal medullary PC12 pheochromocytoma cells, which have been extensively employed for the study of a wide variety of neurobiological processes. Chondroitin sulfate accounts for 70-80% of the [35S] sulfate-labeled proteoglycans present in PC12 cells and secreted into the medium. Two major chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans were detected with molecular sizes of 45,000-100,000 and 120,000-190,000, comprising 14- and 105-kDa core proteins and one or two chondroitin sulfate chains with an average molecular size of 34 kDa. In contrast to the chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans, one major heparan sulfate proteoglycan accounts for most of the remaining 20-30% of the [35S] sulfate-labeled proteoglycans present in the PC12 cells and medium. It has a molecular size of 95,000-170,000, comprising a 65-kDa core protein and two to six 16-kDa heparan sulfate chains. Both the chondroitin sulfate and heparan sulfate proteoglycans also contain O-glycosidically linked oligosaccharides (25-28% of the total oligosaccharides) and predominantly tri- and tetraantennary N-glycosidic oligosaccharides. Proteoglycans produced by the original clone of PC12 cells were compared with those of two other PC12 cell lines (B2 and F3) that differ from the original clone in morphology, adhesive properties, and response to nerve growth factor. Although the F3 cells (a mutant line derived from B2 and reported to lack a cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycan) do not contain a large molecular size heparan sulfate proteoglycan species, there was no significant difference between the B2 and F3 cells in the percentage of total heparan sulfate released by mild trypsinization, and both the B2 and F3 cells synthesized cell-associated and secreted chondroitin sulfate and heparan sulfate proteoglycans having properties very similar to those of the original PC12 cell line but with a reversed ratio (35:65) of chondroitin sulfate to heparan sulfate.  相似文献   

4.
Cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans undergo unique intracellular degradation pathways after they are endocytosed from the cell surface. Heparanase, an endo-beta-glucuronidase capable of cleaving heparan sulfate, has been demonstrated to contribute to the physiological degradation of heparan sulfate proteoglycans and therefore regulation of their biological functions. A rat parathyroid cell line was found to produce heparanase with an optimal activity at neutral and slightly acidic conditions suggesting that the enzyme participates in heparan sulfate proteoglycan metabolism in extralysosomal compartments. To elucidate the detailed properties of the purified enzyme, the substrate specificity against naturally occurring heparan sulfates and chemically modified heparins was studied. Cleavage sites of rat heparanase were present in heparan sulfate chains obtained from a variety of animal organs, but their occurrence was infrequent (average, 1-2 sites per chain) requiring recognition of both undersulfated and sulfated regions of heparan sulfate. On the other hand intact and chemically modified heparins were not cleaved by heparanase. The carbohydrate structure of the newly generated reducing end region of heparan sulfate cleaved by the enzyme was determined, and it represented relatively undersulfated structures. O-Sulfation of heparan sulfate chains also played important roles in substrate recognition, implying that rat parathyroid heparanase acts near the boundary of highly sulfated and undersulfated domains of heparan sulfate proteoglycans. Further elucidation of the roles of heparanase in normal physiological processes would provide an important tool for analyzing the regulation of heparan sulfate-dependent cell functions.  相似文献   

5.
Transport of heparan sulfate into the nuclei of hepatocytes   总被引:13,自引:0,他引:13  
Monolayer cultures of a rat hepatocyte cell line shown previously to accumulate a nuclear pool of free heparan sulfate chains that are enriched in sulfated glucuronic acid (GlcA) residues (Fedarko, N.S., and Conrad, H.E., (1986) J. Cell Biol. 587-599) were incubated with 35SO4(2-), and the rate of appearance of heparan [35S]sulfate in the nuclei was measured. Heparan [35S]sulfate began to accumulate in the nuclei 2 h after the administration of 35SO4(2-) to the cells and reached a steady state level after 20 h. Heparan [35S]sulfate was lost from the nuclei of prelabeled cells with a t1/2 of 8 h. Chloroquine did not inhibit the transport of heparan sulfate into the nucleus, but increased the t1/2 for the exit of heparan sulfate from the nucleus to 20 h and led to a doubling of the steady state level of nuclear heparan sulfate. Heparan [35S]sulfate which was obtained from the medium or from the cell matrix of a labeled culture and which contained only low levels of GlcA-2-SO4 residues was incubated with cultures of unlabeled cells, and the uptake of the exogenous heparan [35S]sulfate was studied. At 37 degrees C the cells took up proteoheparan [35S]sulfate and transported about 10% of the internalized heparan [35S]sulfate into the nucleus, where it appeared as free chains. The heparan [35S]sulfate isolated from the nucleus was enriched in GlcA-2-SO4 residues, whereas the heparan [35S]sulfate remaining in the rest of the intracellular pool showed a corresponding depletion in GlcA-2-SO4 residues. At 16 degrees C, where endocytosed materials do not enter the lysosomes, the cells also transported exogenous proteoheparan [35S]sulfate to the nucleus with similar processing. Thus, the metabolism of exogenous heparan sulfate by hepatocytes follows the same pathway observed in continuously labeled cells and does not involve lysosomal processing of the internalized heparan sulfate.  相似文献   

6.
Synthesis of heparan sulfate proteoglycans by the isolated glomerulus   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Incorporation of [35S]sulfate into newly synthesized macromolecules was studied in the isolated rat glomerulus and found to be linear between 6 and 24 h. When whole glomeruli were treated under conditions that dissociate proteoglycan aggregates, greater than 90% of incorporated label was extracted. Of this, 80-90% was found to be the heparan sulfate proteoglycan. Similarly, a linear incorporation of [35S]sulfate into a glomerular basement membrane-enriched fraction was due almost entirely to proteoheparan sulfate. This predominance of heparan sulfate among the newly sulfated glycosaminoglycans has previously been observed in vivo and in the perfused kidney, but different patterns have hitherto been described in vitro. The present results suggest that under certain conditions, the isolated glomerulus is a suitable in vitro model for the study of proteoglycan synthesis. The pattern of incorporation of proteoglycans into the glomerular basement membrane reflects the time course and distribution of their synthesis by the whole glomerulus.  相似文献   

7.
The ability of extracellular matrix heparan sulfate to alter the susceptibility of human endothelial cells to S. aureus was investigated. Endothelial cells grown on extracellular matrix synthesized by S. aureus-infected endothelial cells were more susceptible to subsequent staphylococcal infection than endothelial cells grown on the extracellular matrix synthesized by untreated endothelial cells. Endothelial cells were more susceptible to S. aureus infection when (1) grown on heparitinase-treated extracellular matrix that removed heparan sulfate chains, (2) grown on extracellular matrix produced by chlorate-treated endothelial cells that reduced sulfation in the matrix heparan sulfate proteoglycans, (3) grown on heparan sulfate purified from extracellular matrix elaborated by infected endothelial cells, and (4) endothelial cells were chlorate-treated and therefore expressed desulfated cellular heparan sulfate proteoglycans. Extracellular matrix produced by S. aureus-infected endothelial cells contained heparan sulfate proteoglycans with reduced sulfation. The altered extracellular matrix with reduced sulfated heparan sulfate proteoglycans signalled the uninfected endothelial cells to produce under sulfated cellular heparan sulfate proteoglycans that increased S. aureus adherence to the endothelial cells. J. Cell. Physiol. 173:102–109, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

8.
Selenate, a sulfation inhibitor, blocks the synthesis of heparan sulfate and chondroitin sulfate by cultured endothelial cells. In contrast, selenate does not affect the production of hyaluronic acid, a nonsulfated glycosaminoglycan. No differences in molecular weight, [3H]glucosamine/[35S]sulfuric acid ratios, or disaccharide composition were observed when the heparan sulfate synthesized by selenate-treated cells was compared with that of control cells. The absence of undersulfated chains in preparations from cultures exposed to selenate supports the concept that, in the intact cell, the polymerization of heparan sulfate might be dependent on the sulfation of the saccharide units added to the growing glycosaminoglycan chain.  相似文献   

9.
Heparan sulfate proteoglycans were extracted from rat brain microsomal membranes or whole forebrain with deoxycholate and purified from accompanying chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans and membrane glycoproteins by ion-exchange chromatography, affinity chromatography on lipoprotein lipase-Sepharose, and gel filtration. The proteoglycan has a molecular size of approximately 220,000, containing glycosaminoglycan chains of Mr = 14,000-15,000. In [3H]glucosamine-labeled heparan sulfate proteoglycans, approximately 22% of the radioactivity is present in glycoprotein oligosaccharides, consisting predominantly of N-glycosidically linked tri- and tetraantennary complex oligosaccharides (60%, some of which are sulfated) and O-glycosidic oligosaccharides (33%). Small amounts of chondroitin sulfate (4-6% of the total glycosaminoglycans) copurified with the heparan sulfate proteoglycan through a variety of fractionation procedures. Incubation of [35S]sulfate-labeled microsomes with heparin or 2 M NaCl released approximately 21 and 13%, respectively, of the total heparan sulfate, as compared to the 8-9% released by buffered saline or chondroitin sulfate and the 82% which is extracted by 0.2% deoxycholate. It therefore appears that there are at least two distinct types of association of heparan sulfate proteoglycans with brain membranes.  相似文献   

10.
"Fibroblast-like" cells from the intimal layer of bovine aorta were grown in culture. The formation, composition, molecular weight and turnover rate of different pools of glycosaminoglycans were investigated in cultures incubated in the presence [35S]sulfate or [14C]glucosamine. The newly synthesized glycosaminoglycans are distributed into an extracellular pool (37 - 58%), a cell-membrane associated or pericellular pool (23 - 33%), and an intracellular pool (19 - 30%), each pool exhibiting a characteristic distribution pattern of chondroitin sulfate, dermatan sulfate, heparan sulfate and hyaluronate. The distribution pattern of the extracellular glycosaminoglycans resembles closely that found in bovine aorta. A small subfraction of the pericellular pool - tentatively named "undercellular" pool--has been characterized by its high heparan sulfate content. The intracellular and pericellular [35S]glycosaminoglycan pools reach a constant radioactivity after 8-12 h and 24 h, respectively, whereas the extracellular [35S]glycosaminoglycans are secreted into the medium at a linear rate over a period of at least 6 days. The intracellular glycosaminoglycans are mainly in the process of degradation, as indicated by their low molecular weight and by their half-life of 7 h, but intracellular dermatan sulfate is degraded more rapidly (half-life 4-5 h) than intracellular chondroitin sulfate and heparan sulfate (half-life 7-8 h). Glycosaminoglycans leave the pericellular pool with a half-life of 12-14 h by 2 different routes: about 60% disappear as macromolecules into the culture medium, and the remainder is pinocytosed and degraded to a large extent. Extracellular and at least a part of the pericellular glycosaminoglycans are proteoglycans. Even under dissociative conditions (4M guanidinium chloride) their hydrodynamic volume is sufficient for partial exclusion from Sepharose 4B gel. The existence of topographically distinct glycosaminoglycan pools with varying metabolic characteristics and differing accessibility for degradation requiresa reconsideration and a more reserved interpretation of results concerning the turnover rates of glycosaminoglycans as determined in arterial tissue.  相似文献   

11.
Glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) are the portion of a proteoglycan that determine its final shape and function. The molecular structure of predominant GAG species in camel liver and lung is reported for the first time. The one-humped camel survives in an extreme, arid habitat and, thus, offers a good model to study the role of glycomics on homeostasis. Heparan sulfate (HS) from the lung and liver of the one-humped camel were isolated. Characterization of these newly isolated glycosaminoglycans included (1)H NMR spectroscopy and disaccharide compositional analysis. The relative molecular weight of these GAGs was estimated by gradient polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and their degree of sulfation was also assessed. Anticoagulant activity was determined using an anti-factor Xa assay and the HS from camel lung shows approximately 50% of heparin's activity. The structural differences of camel liver GAGs compared to human and porcine liver heparin and HS is discussed. Camel lung heparan sulfate resembles both heparin and HS in its structure and properties suggesting that it is either a highly sulfated form of HS, a mixture of heparin and HS or an undersulfated heparin.  相似文献   

12.
Growing and confluent cultures of a rat hepatocyte cell line were labeled with 35SO4(2-) and the heparan sulfate in the culture medium, the pericellular matrix, the nucleus, the nuclear outer membrane, and the remaining cytoplasmic pool was purified by DEAE-cellulose chromatography. The heparan sulfate in all pools from the confluent cells was bound more strongly on the DEAE-cellulose column than the corresponding pools from the growing cells. Gel filtration of each pool before and after beta-elimination showed that the heparan sulfate from the nuclear and nuclear membrane pools was composed of primarily free chains, whereas the heparan sulfate in all of the other pools was a mixture of proteoglycans and free chains. The heparan sulfate in each pool was cleaved with nitrous acid to obtain mixtures of di- and tetrasaccharides. Analysis of these mixtures showed that the structural features of the heparan sulfates in each pool were different and were altered significantly when the growing cells became confluent. The nuclear-plus-nuclear membrane pools represented 6.5% and 5.4% of the total cell-associated heparan sulfate in the growing cells and the confluent cells, respectively. The structural features of the heparan sulfate in the two nuclear pools were very similar to each other, but were markedly different from those of the heparan sulfate from the other pools or from any previously described heparan sulfate or heparin. The most unusual aspect of these structures was the high content of beta-D-glucuronosyl(2-SO4)----D-glucosamine-N,O-(SO4)2 disaccharide units in these sequences. The mode of biosynthesis and delivery of these unusual sequences to the nucleus and the potential significance of these observations are discussed.  相似文献   

13.
The glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchor of the plasma membrane-associated heparan sulfate (HS) proteoglycan was metabolically radiolabeled with [3H]myristic acid, [3H]palmitic acid, [3H]inositol, [3H]ethanolamine, or [32P]phosphate in rat ovarian granulosa cell culture. Cell cultures labeled with [3H]myristic acid or [3H]palmitic acid were extracted with 4 M guanidine HCl buffer containing 2% Triton X-100 and the proteoglycans were purified by ion exchange chromatography after extensive delipidation. Specific incorporation of 3H into GPI-anchor was demonstrated by removing the label with a phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C (PI-PLC). Incorporation of 3H activity into glycosaminoglycans and core glycoproteins was also demonstrated. However, the specific activity of 3H in these structures was approximately 2 orders of magnitude lower than that in the GPI-anchor, suggesting that 3H label was the result of the metabolic utilization of catabolic products of the 3H-labeled fatty acids. PI-PLC treatment of cell cultures metabolically labeled with [3H]inositol, [3H]ethanolamine, or [32P]phosphate specifically released radiolabeled cell surface-associated HS proteoglycans indicating the presence of GPI-anchor in these proteoglycans. GPI-anchored HS proteoglycans accounted for 20-30% of the total cell surface-associated HS proteoglycans and virtually all of them were removed by PI-PLC. These results further substantiate the presence of GPI-anchored heparan sulfate proteoglycan in ovarian granulosa cells and its cell surface localization.  相似文献   

14.
The metabolism of heparan sulfate proteoglycan was studied in monolayer cultures of a rat hepatocyte cell line. Late log cells were labeled with 35SO4(2-) or [3H] glucosamine, and labeled heparan sulfate, measured as nitrous acid-susceptible product, was assayed in the culture medium, the pericellular matrix, and the intracellular pools. Heparan sulfate in the culture medium and the intracellular pools increased linearly with time, while that in the matrix reached a steady-state level after a 10-h labeling period. When pulse-labeled cells were incubated in unlabeled medium, a small fraction of the intracellular pool was released rapidly into the culture medium while the matrix heparan sulfate was taken up by the cells, and the resulting intracellular pool was rapidly catabolized. The structures of the heparan sulfate chains in the three pools were very similar. Both the culture medium pool and the cell-associated fraction of heparan sulfate contained proteoheparan sulfate plus a polydisperse mixture of heparan chains which were attached to little, if any, protein. Pulse-chase data suggested that the free heparan sulfate chains were formed as a result of catabolism of the proteoglycan. When NH4Cl, added to inhibit lysosomal function, was present during either a labeling period or a chase period, the total catabolism of the heparan sulfate chains to monosaccharides plus free SO2-4 was blocked, but the conversion of the proteoglycan to free heparan sulfate chains continued at a reduced rate.  相似文献   

15.
A rat hepatoma cell line was shown to synthesize heparan sulfate and chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans. Unlike cultured hepatocytes, the hepatoma cells did not deposit these proteoglycans into an extracellular matrix, and most of the newly synthesized heparan sulfate proteoglycans were secreted into the culture medium. Heparan sulfate proteoglycans were also found associated with the cell surface. These proteoglycans could be solubilized by mild trypsin or detergent treatment of the cells but could not be displaced from the cells by incubation with heparin. The detergent-solubilized heparan sulfate proteoglycan had a hydrophobic segment that enabled it to bind to octyl- Sepharose. This segment could conceivably anchor the molecule in the lipid interior of the plasma membrane. The size of the hepatoma heparan sulfate proteoglycans was similar to that of proteoglycans isolated from rat liver microsomes or from primary cultures of rat hepatocytes. Ion-exchange chromatography on DEAE-Sephacel indicated that the hepatoma heparan sulfate proteoglycans had a lower average charge density than the rat liver heparan sulfate proteoglycans. The lower charge density of the hepatoma heparan sulfate can be largely attributed to a reduced number of N-sulfated glucosamine units in the polysaccharide chain compared with that of rat liver heparan sulfate. Hepatoma heparan sulfate proteoglycans purified from the culture medium had a considerably lower affinity for fibronectin-Sepharose compared with that of rat liver heparan sulfate proteoglycans. Furthermore, the hepatoma proteoglycan did not bind to the neoplastic cells, whereas heparan sulfate from normal rat liver bound to the hepatoma cells in a time-dependent reaction. The possible consequences of the reduced sulfation of the heparan sulfate proteoglycan produced by the hepatoma cells are discussed in terms of the postulated roles of heparan sulfate in the regulation of cell growth and extracellular matrix formation.  相似文献   

16.
The intracellular amastigote form of leishmania is responsible for the cell-to-cell spread of leishmania infection in the mammalian host. In this report, we identify a high-affinity, heparin-binding activity on the surface of the amastigote form of leishmania. Amastigotes of Leishmania amazonensis bound approximately 120,000 molecules of heparin per cell, with a Kd of 8.8 x 10(-8) M. This heparin-binding activity mediates the adhesion of amastigotes to mammalian cells via heparan sulfate proteoglycans, which are expressed on the surface of mammalian cells. Amastigotes bound efficiently to a variety of adherent cells which express cell-surface proteoglycans. Unlike wild-type CHO cells, which bound amastigotes avidly, CHO cells with genetic deficiencies in heparan sulfate proteoglycan biosynthesis or cells treated with heparitinase failed to bind amastigotes even at high parasite-input dosages. Cells which express normal levels of undersulfated heparan bound amastigotes nearly as efficiently as did wild-type cells. The adhesion of amastigotes to wild-type nonmyeloid cells was almost completely inhibited by the addition of micromolar amounts of soluble heparin or heparan sulfate but not by the addition of other sulfated polysaccharides.l Binding of amastigotes to macrophages, however, was inhibited by only 60% after pretreatment of amastigotes with heparin, suggesting that macrophages have an additional mechanism for recognizing amastigotes. These results suggest that leishmania amastigotes express a high-affinity, heparin-binding activity on their surface which can interact with heparan sulfate proteoglycans on mammalian cells. This interaction may represent an important first step in the invasion of host cells by amastigotes.  相似文献   

17.
Heparan sulfate proteoglycan from the Engelbreth-Holm-Swarm mouse tumor was previously separated into two forms: a high density form (Form HD) and low density form (Form LD). In this study, the two forms were radiolabeled either metabolically with [35S]sulfate or [3H]serine or chemically with 125I. Pulse-chase experiments with [35S]sulfate showed no clear precursor-product relationship between the two forms. Analyses of the labeled proteoglycan samples with heparitinase and chondroitinase ABC indicated that Form LD is a large proteoglycan containing heparan sulfate chains attached to a single core molecule (Mr = 450,000), whereas Form HD is a mixture of small proteoglycans with four different size core molecules (Mr = 34,000, 29,000, 27,000, and 21,000), most, if not all, of which bear both heparan sulfate (Mr = 60,000) and chondroitin sulfate (Mr = 17,000) chains. Glycosaminoglycan-enriched fragments obtained from Form HD by V8 protease digestion were also shown to contain both heparitinase-susceptible chains and chondroitinase ABC-susceptible chains. Tryptic peptide maps of 125I-labeled Form HD and the glycosaminoglycan-enriched fragments derived therefrom were quite different from the corresponding maps for Form LD.  相似文献   

18.
Rat ovarian granulosa cells were isolated from immature female rats after stimulation with pregnant mare's serum gonadotropin and maintained in culture. Proteoglycans were labeled using [35S]sulfate, [3H]serine, [3H]glucosamine, or [3H]mannose as precursors. A species of heparan sulfate proteoglycan was purified using DEAE-Sephacel chromatography under dissociative conditions in the presence of detergent. The heparan sulfate proteoglycan, which constituted approximately 15% of the 35S-labeled proteoglycans in the culture medium has a similar hydrodynamic size (Kd = 0.62 on Sepharose CL-2B) and buoyant density distribution in CsCl density gradients as the low buoyant density dermatan sulfate proteoglycan synthesized by the same granulosa cells and described in the accompanying report (Yanagishita, M., and Hascall, V. C. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 12847-12856). The heparan sulfate chains (average Mr = 28,000) have an average of 0.8-0.9 sulfate groups/repeating disaccharide, of which 50% are N-sulfate, 30% are alkaline-labile O-sulfate (presumably on the 6-position of glucosamine residues), and 20% are alkaline-resistant O-sulfate groups. Alkaline borohydride treatment released both N-linked oligosaccharide-peptides containing mannose, glucosamine, and sialic acid, and O-linked oligosaccharides. Trypsin digestion of the proteoglycan generated fragments which contain (a) glycosaminoglycan-peptides with an average of 2 heparan sulfate chains/peptide; (b) clusters of O-linked oligosaccharides on peptides; and (c) N-linked oligosaccharide-peptides, which are as small as single N-linked oligosaccharides. The compositions of the O-linked and N-linked oligosaccharides and the trypsin fragments of this heparan sulfate proteoglycan were very similar to those of the low buoyant density dermatan sulfate proteoglycan synthesized by the same cells.  相似文献   

19.
Disulfide-bonded aggregates of heparan sulfate proteoglycans   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Heparan sulfate proteoglycans have been isolated from Swiss mouse 3T3 cells by using two nondegradative techniques: extraction with 4 M guanidine or 2.5% 1-butanol. These proteoglycans were separated from copurifying chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans by using ion-exchange chromatography on DEAE-cellulose in the presence of 2 M urea. The purified heparan sulfate proteoglycans are substantially smaller, ca. Mr 20 000, than those isolated from these same cells with trypsin, ca. Mr 720 000 [Johnston, L.S., Keller, K. L., & Keller, J. M. (1979) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 583, 81-94]. However, all of the heparan sulfate proteoglycans extracted by these three methods contain similar glycosaminoglycan chains (Mr 7500) and are derived from the same pool of cell surface associated molecules. The trypsin-released heparan sulfate proteoglycan (ca. Mr 720 000) can be significantly reduced in size (ca. Mr 33 000) under strong denaturing conditions in the presence of the disulfide reducing agent dithiothreitol, which suggests that this form of the molecule is a disulfide-bonded aggregate. The heparan sulfate proteoglycan isolated from the medium also undergoes a significant size reduction in the presence of dithiothreitol, indicating that a similar aggregate is formed as part of the normal release of heparan sulfate proteoglycans into the medium. These results suggest that well-shielded disulfide bonds between individual heparan sulfate proteoglycan monomers may account for the large variation in sizes which has been reported for heparan sulfate proteoglycans isolated from a variety of cells and tissues with a variety of extraction procedures.  相似文献   

20.
Previous studies have reported an increase in heparan sulfate glycosaminoglycan (HSGAG) during skeletal muscle differentiation in culture. We have investigated this phenomenon further in relation to the heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPG) produced by myogenic cultures. Pulse-chase analysis indicated an approx. 3-fold increase in heparan sulfate synthesis in myotube cultures over that in proliferating or aligning myoblast cultures. Muscle fibroblast culture heparan sulfate synthesis was higher than that of myoblasts but was lower than myotubes. The turnover rates appeared to be the same for all stages of development, with a t1/2 of approx. 5 h. Enrichment for heparan sulfate by Sepharose CL-4B and DEAE-Sephacel chromatography indicated an increase in the hydrodynamic size of the proteoglycan produced by myotubes over that from myoblasts, with a shift in Kav from 0.14-0.19 to 0.07. Fibroblasts synthesized the smallest proteoglycan, with a Kav of 0.22. All of the proteoglycans contained similar sized glycosaminoglycan chains with an estimated molecular weight of 30,000-40,000. Localization of the heparan sulfate proteoglycan in myotube cultures by trypsin sensitivity indicated much of the intact proteoglycan to be closely associated with the cell surface, while internalized material appeared in a degraded form.  相似文献   

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