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1.
Antibodies were raised against a small high-density and a large low-density form of heparan sulfate proteoglycan from a basement membrane-producing mouse tumor and were characterized by radioimmunoassays, immunoprecipitation and immunohistological methods. Antigenicity was due to the protein cores and included epitopes unique to the low density form as well as some shared by both proteoglycans. The antibodies did not cross-react with other basement membrane proteins or with chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans from interstitial connective tissues. The heparan sulfate proteoglycans occurred ubiquitously in embryonic and adult basement membranes and could be initially detected at the 2-4 cell stage of mouse embryonic development. Low levels were also found in serum. Biosynthetic studies demonstrated identical or similar proteoglycans in cultures of normal and carcinoembryonic cells and in organ cultures of fetal tissues. They could be distinguished from liver cell membrane heparan sulfate proteoglycan, indicating that the basement membrane types of proteoglycans represent a unique class of extracellular matrix proteins.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
Heparan sulfates, the carbohydrate chains of heparan sulfate proteoglycans, play an important role in basement membrane organization and endothelial barrier function. We explored whether endothelial cells secrete a heparan sulfate degrading heparanase under inflammatory conditions and what pathways were responsible for heparanase expression. Heparanase mRNA and protein by Western blot were induced when cultured endothelial cells were treated with cytokines, oxidized low-density lipoprotein (LDL) or fatty acids. Heparanase protein in the cell media was induced 2-10-fold when cells were treated with tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFalpha) or interleukin 1beta (IL-1beta). Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), in contrast, decreased heparanase secretion. Inhibitors to nuclear factor-kappaB (NFkappaB), PI3-kinase, MAP kinase, or c-jun kinase (JNK) did not affect TNFalpha-induced heparanase secretion. Interestingly, inhibition of caspase-8 completely abolished heparanase secretion induced by TNFalpha. Fatty acids also induced heparanase, and this required an Sp1 site in the heparanase promoter. Immunohistochemical analyses of cross sections of aorta showed intense staining for heparanase in the endothelium of apoE-null mice but not wild-type mice. Thus, heparanase is an inducible inflammatory gene product that may play an important role in vascular biology.  相似文献   

4.
The murine embryonal carcinoma derived cell line M1536-B3 secretes the basement membrane components laminin and entactin and, when grown in bacteriological dishes, produces and adheres to sacs of basement membrane components. Heparan sulfate proteoglycans have been isolated from these sacs, the cells, and the medium. At least three different heparan sulfate proteoglycans are produced by these cells as determined by proteoglycan size, glycosaminoglycan chain length, and charge density. The positions of the N- and O-sulfate groups in the glycosaminoglycan chains from each proteoglycan appear to be essentially the same despite differences in the size and culture compartment locations of the heparan sulfate proteoglycan. Additionally, small quantities of chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans are found in each fraction and copurify with each heparan sulfate proteoglycan. Because this cell line appears to synthesize at least three different heparan sulfate proteoglycans which are targeted to different final locations (basement membrane, cell surface, and medium), this will be a useful system in which to study the factors which determine final heparan sulfate proteoglycan structures and culture compartment targeting and the possible effects of the protein core(s) on heparan sulfate carbohydrate chain synthesis and secretion.  相似文献   

5.
VEGF was first described as vascular permeability factor, a potent inducer of vascular leakage. Genetic evidence indicates that VEGF-stimulated endothelial proliferation in vitro and angiogenesis in vivo depend on heparan sulfate, but a requirement for heparan sulfate in vascular hyperpermeability has not been explored. Here we show that altering endothelial cell heparan sulfate biosynthesis in vivo decreases hyperpermeability induced by both VEGF(165) and VEGF(121). Because VEGF(121) does not bind heparan sulfate, the requirement for heparan sulfate suggested that it interacted with VEGF receptors rather than the ligand. By applying proximity ligation assays to primary brain endothelial cells, we show a direct interaction in situ between heparan sulfate and the VEGF receptor, VEGFR2. Furthermore, the number of heparan sulfate-VEGFR2 complexes increased in response to both VEGF(165) and VEGF(121). Genetic or heparin lyase-mediated alteration of endothelial heparan sulfate attenuated phosphorylation of VEGFR2 in response to VEGF(165) and VEGF(121), suggesting that the functional VEGF receptor complex contains heparan sulfate. Pharmacological blockade of heparan sulfate-protein interactions inhibited hyperpermeability in vivo, suggesting heparan sulfate as a potential target for treating hyperpermeability associated with ischemic disease.  相似文献   

6.
The rat beta-tropomyosin (beta-TM) gene encodes both skeletal muscle beta-TM mRNA and nonmuscle TM-1 mRNA via alternative RNA splicing. This gene contains eleven exons: exons 1-5, 8, and 9 are common to both mRNAs; exons 6 and 11 are used in fibroblasts as well as in smooth muscle, whereas exons 7 and 10 are used in skeletal muscle. Previously we demonstrated that utilization of the 3' splice site of exon 7 is blocked in nonmuscle cells. In this study, we use both in vitro and in vivo methods to investigate the regulation of the 5' splice site of exon 7 in nonmuscle cells. The 5' splice site of exon 7 is used efficiently in the absence of flanking sequences, but its utilization is suppressed almost completely when the upstream exon 6 and intron 6 are present. The suppression of the 5' splice site of exon 7 does not result from the sequences at the 3' end of intron 6 that block the use of the 3' splice site of exon 7. However, mutating two conserved nucleotides GU at the 5' splice site of exon 6 results in the efficient use of the 5' splice site of exon 7. In addition, a mutation that changes the 5' splice site of exon 7 to the consensus U1 snRNA binding site strongly stimulates the splicing of exon 7 to the downstream common exon 8. Collectively, these studies demonstrate that 5' splice site competition is responsible, in part, for the suppression of exon 7 usage in nonmuscle cells.  相似文献   

7.
Heparan sulfate proteoglycan from human and equine glomeruli and tubules   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
1. Proteoglycans were isolated from human and equine glomeruli or tubules by guanidine extraction and anion exchange chromatography. 2. These proteoglycan preparations contained about equal amounts of heparan sulfate and chondroitin sulfates. 3. During the preparation of glomerular or tubular basement membranes the main part of proteoglycans (greater than 50%) was extracted in the salt extract. Chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan was mainly found in the water and salt extracts of glomeruli and tubules, heparan sulfate proteoglycan in the deoxycholate extracts and the basement membranes. 4. The glomerular basement membrane (GBM) contains about 12% (human) or 20% (equine) of the proteoglycans of the total glomerulus. They consist of greater than 70% (equine) or 80% (human) of heparan sulfate. 5. Heparan sulfate proteoglycan was isolated from the proteoglycan preparations of human or equine glomeruli and tubules by additional treatment with nucleases and chondroitinase ABC followed by CsCl gradient centrifugation. 6. Protein accounts for about 40% (dry weight) of the heparan sulfate proteoglycans. Their amino acid composition is characterized by a high content of glycine, but 3-hydroxyproline, 4-hydroxyproline and hydroxylysine are lacking. 7. The biochemical characteristics of the heparan sulfate proteoglycan of human or equine glomeruli or tubules differ from that isolated from rat glomeruli by their higher protein content and their amino acid composition. The significance of these differences is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
Modulation of vascular endothelial cell growth by basement membrane heparan sulfate was investigated using four lines of normal and transformed cells. The growth of transformed endothelial cells, but not normal cells, on reconstituted basement membrane was severely suppressed when heparan sulfate, one of the components of the membrane, was specifically degraded by an enzyme, heparitinase. Similarly, when cells were grown on surfaces coated with heparan sulfate, as little as 60 pg/cm2 of heparan sulfate caused growth enhancement of transformed cells, but suppression of normal cells. These results together with our previous observations (IMAMURA, T and MITSUI, Y. (1987) Exp. Cell Res., 172: 92-100) argue that transformed cells have reversed a mechanism by which basement membrane heparan sulfate functions as a physiological suppressor for the growth of normal endothelial cells.  相似文献   

9.
Evidence suggests that endothelial cell layer heparan sulfate proteoglycans include a variety of different sized molecules which most likely contain different protein cores. In the present report, approximately half of endothelial cell surface associated heparan sulfate proteoglycan is shown to be releasable with soluble heparin. The remaining cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycan, as well as extracellular matrix heparan sulfate proteoglycan, cannot be removed from the cells with heparin. The heparin nonreleasable cell surface proteoglycan can be released by membrane disrupting agents and is able to intercalate into liposomes. When the heparin releasable and nonreleasable cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans are compared, differences in proteoglycan size are also evident. Furthermore, the intact heparin releasable heparan sulfate proteoglycan is closer in size to proteoglycans isolated from the extracellular matrix and from growth medium than to that which is heparin nonreleasable. These data indicate that cultured porcine aortic endothelial cells contain at least two distinct types of cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans, one of which appears to be associated with the cells through its glycosaminoglycan chains. The other (which is more tightly associated) is probably linked via a membrane intercalated protein core.Abbreviations ECM extracellular matrix - HSPG heparan sulfate proteoglycan - PAE porcine aortic endothelial - PBS phosphate buffered saline  相似文献   

10.
Chondrogenesis, the differentiation of mesenchyme into cartilage, results in a change in composition of the extracellular matrix. The cartilage matrix contains several unique components, including type II collagen and chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan; it also contains fibronectin, a glycoprotein that mediates the interaction of cells with their matrix. We show that chick cartilage fibronectin mRNA contains an unusual pattern of alternatively spliced exons. Specifically, it contains exon IIIB but does not contain exon IIIA whereas fibronectin mRNA from mesenchyme contains both exons IIIB and IIIA. Thus the splicing pattern of the fibronectin mRNA must change from B+A+ to B+A- during chondrogenesis. Most fibronectin mRNA in other mesenchymal tissues contains exon IIIA but little exon IIIB (B-A+). Culturing of chondrocytes (cartilage-producing cells) results in loss of exon IIIB from fibronectin mRNA (B-A-). Manipulation of culture conditions to produce more adhesive chondrocytes (treatment with hyaluronidase, transformation with Rous sarcoma virus, and treatment with retinoic acid) increases the amount of fibronectin mRNA containing exon IIIA. These results suggest that exon IIIB may mediate the interactions of chondrocytes with the unique components of the cartilage matrix and exon IIIA may play a role in chondrocyte adhesion.  相似文献   

11.
The Xenopus alphafast-tropomyosin gene contains in its central part a set of mutually exclusive exons, designated 6A and 6B, which are incorporated into mRNA encoding, respectively, nonmuscle and muscle tropomyosins. In this study, we show that usage of both exons is strictly regulated during development, exon 6A being used in the oocyte and nonmuscle tissues of the embryo, while exon 6B is used in muscle tissues. An approach of transient embryo transgenesis was developed to study the mechanisms involved in the splice site choice during development. We demonstrate that a-tropomyosin minigenes driven by tissue-specific promoters that target gene expression in nonmuscle and muscle tissues recapitulate the splicing pattern of the endogenous gene. A mutational analysis showed that regulation occurred at both exons 6A and 6B in muscle and nonmuscle tissues. In this context, we have identified an element located in the intron downstream of 6A that participates in the recognition of the weak 5' splice site of exon 6A and the repression of exon 6B in nonmuscle cells.  相似文献   

12.
The basement membrane heparan sulfate proteoglycan produced by the Englebreth-Holm-Swarm (EHS) tumor and by glomeruli were compared by immunological methods. Antibodies to the EHS proteoglycan immunoprecipitated a single precursor protein (Mr = 400,000) from [35S]methionine-pulsed glomeruli, the same size produced by EHS cells. These antibodies detected both heparan sulfate proteoglycans and glycoproteins in extracts of unlabeled glomeruli and glomerular basement membrane. The proteoglycans contained core proteins of varying size (Mr = 150,000 to 400,000) with a Mr = 250,000 species being predominant. The glycoproteins are fragments of the core protein which lack heparan sulfate side chains. Antibodies to glomerular basement membrane proteoglycan immunoprecipitated the precursor protein (Mr = 400,000) synthesized by EHS cells and also reacted with most of the proteolytic fragments of the EHS proteoglycan. This antibody did not, however, react with the P44 fragment, a peptide situated at one end of the EHS proteoglycan core protein. These data suggest that the glomerular basement membrane proteoglycan is synthesized from a large precursor protein which undergoes specific proteolytic processing.  相似文献   

13.
The chicken beta-tropomyosin gene contains an internal pair of mutually exclusive exons (6A and 6B) that are selected in a tissue-specific manner. Exon 6A is incorporated in fibroblasts and smooth muscle cells, whereas exon 6B is skeletal muscle specific. In this study we show that two different regions in the intron between the two mutually exclusive exons are important for this specific selection in nonmuscle cells. Sequences in the 3' end of the intron have a negative effect in the recognition of the 3' splice site, while sequences in the 5' end of the intron have a positive effect in the recognition of the 5' splice site. First, sequences in exon 6B as well as in the intron upstream of exon 6B are both able to inhibit splicing when placed in a heterologous gene. The sequences in the polypyrimidine stretch region contribute to splicing inhibition of exons 5 or 6A to 6B through a mechanism independent of their implication in the previously described secondary structure around exon 6B. Second, we have identified a sequence of 30 nucleotides in the intron just downstream of exon 6A that is essential for the recognition of the 5' splice site of exon 6A. This is so even after introduction of a consensus sequence into the 5' splice site of this exon. Deletion of this sequence blocks splicing of exon 6A to 6B after formation of the presplicing complex. Taken together, these results suggest that both the mutually exclusive behavior and the choice between exons 6A and 6B of the chicken beta-tropomyosin gene are trans regulated.  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
16.
The vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) receptor tyrosine kinase subtype kinase insert domain receptor (KDR) contains seven extracellular Ig-like domains, of which the three most amino-terminal contain the necessary structural features required for VEGF binding. To clarify the functional role of KDR Ig-like domains 4-7, we compared VEGF-induced signaling in human embryonic kidney and porcine aortic endothelial cells expressing native versus mutant receptor proteins in which Ig-like domains 4-7, 4-6, or 7 had been deleted. Western blotting using an anti-receptor antibody indicated equivalent expression levels for each of the recombinant proteins. As expected, VEGF treatment robustly augmented native receptor autophosphorylation. In contrast, receptor autophosphorylation, as well as downstream signaling events, were VEGF-independent for cells expressing mutant receptors. (125)I-VEGF(165) bound with equal or better affinity to mutant versus native receptor, although the number of radioligand binding sites was significantly reduced because a significant percentage of mutant, but not native, receptors were localized to the cell interior. As was the case for native KDR, (125)I-VEGF(165) binding to the mutant receptors was dependent upon cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans, and (125)I-VEGF(121) bound with an affinity equal to that of (125)I-VEGF(165) to the native and mutant receptors. It is concluded that KDR Ig-like domains 4-7 contain structural features that inhibit receptor signaling by a mechanism that is independent of neuropilin-1 and heparan sulfate proteoglycans. We speculate that this provides a cellular mechanism for blocking unwanted signaling events in the absence of VEGF.  相似文献   

17.
Glypican-1 is a member of a family of glycosylphosphatidylinositol anchored cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans implicated in the control of cellular growth and differentiation. The 165-amino acid form of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF165) is a mitogen for endothelial cells and a potent angiogenic factor in vivo. Heparin binds to VEGF165 and enhances its binding to VEGF receptors. However, native HSPGs that bind VEGF165 and modulate its receptor binding have not been identified. Among the glypicans, glypican-1 is the only member that is expressed in the vascular system. We have therefore examined whether glypican-1 can interact with VEGF165. Glypican-1 from rat myoblasts binds specifically to VEGF165 but not to VEGF121. The binding has an apparent dissociation constant of 3 x 10(-10) M. The binding of glypican-1 to VEGF165 is mediated by the heparan sulfate chains of glypican-1, because heparinase treatment abolishes this interaction. Only an excess of heparin or heparan sulfates but not other types of glycosaminoglycans inhibited this interaction. VEGF165 interacts specifically not only with rat myoblast glypican-1 but also with human endothelial cell-derived glypican-1. The binding of 125I-VEGF165 to heparinase-treated human vascular endothelial cells is reduced following heparinase treatment, and addition of glypican-1 restores the binding. Glypican-1 also potentiates the binding of 125I-VEGF165 to a soluble extracellular domain of the VEGF receptor KDR/flk-1. Furthermore, we show that glypican-1 acts as an extracellular chaperone that can restore the receptor binding ability of VEGF165, which has been damaged by oxidation. Taken together, these results suggest that glypican-1 may play an important role in the control of angiogenesis by regulating the activity of VEGF165, a regulation that may be critical under conditions such as wound repair, in which oxidizing agents that can impair the activity of VEGF are produced, and in situations were the concentrations of active VEGF are limiting.  相似文献   

18.
Heterogeneity of heparan sulfate proteoglycans synthesized by PYS-2 cells   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Antibodies to the basement membrane proteoglycan produced by the EHS tumor were used to immunoprecipitate [35S]sulfate-labeled protoglycans produced by PYS-2 cells. The immunoprecipitated proteoglycans were subsequently fractionated by CsCl density gradient centrifugation and Sepharose CL-4B chromatography. The culture medium contained a low-density proteoglycan eluting from Sepharose CL-4B at Kav = 0.18, containing heparan sulfate side chains of Mr = 35-40,000. The medium also contained a high-density proteoglycan eluting from Sepharose CL-4B at Kav = 0.23, containing heparan sulfate side chains of Mr = 30,000. The corresponding proteoglycans of the cell layer were all smaller than those in the medium. Since the antibodies used to precipitate those proteoglycans were directed against the protein core, this suggests that these proteoglycans share common antigenic features, and may be derived from a common precursor which undergoes modification by the removal of protein segments and a portion of each heparan sulfate chain.  相似文献   

19.
Kidneys were perfused with [35S]sulfate at 4 h in vitro to radiolabel sulfated proteoglycans. Glomeruli were isolated from the labeled kidneys, and purified fractions of glomerular basement membrane (GBM) were prepared therefrom. Proteoglycans were extracted from GBM fractions by use of 4 M guanidine-HCl at 4 degrees C in the presence of protease inhibitors. The efficiency of extraction was approximately 55% based on 35S radioactivity. The extracted proteoglycans were characterized by gel-filtration chromatography (before and after degradative treatments) and by their behavior in dissociative CsCl gradients. A single peak of proteoglycans with an Mr of 130,000 (based on cartilage proteoglycan standards) was obtained on Sepharose CL-4B or CL-6B. Approximately 85% of the total proteoglycans were susceptible to nitrous acid oxidation (which degrades heparan sulfates), and approximately 15% were susceptible to digestion with chondroitinase ABC (degrades chondroitin-4 and -6 sulfates and dermatan sulfate). The released glycosaminoglycan (GAG) chains had an Mr of approximately 26,000. Density gradient centrifugation resulted in the partial separation of the extracted proteoglycans into two types with different densities: a heparan sulfate proteoglycan that was enriched in the heavier fraction (p greater than 1.43 g/ml), and a chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan that was concentrated in the lighter fractions (p less than 1.41). The results indicate that two types of proteoglycans are synthesized and incorporated into the GBM that are similar in size and consist of four to five GAG chains (based on cartilage proteoglycan standards). The chromatographic behavior of the extracted proteoglycans and the derived GAG, together with the fact that the two types of proteoglycans can be partially separated into the density gradient, suggest that the heparan sulfate and chondroitin sulfate(s) are located on different core proteins.  相似文献   

20.
Cultured mouse mammary (NMuMG) cells produce heparan sulfate-rich proteoglycans that are found at the cell surface, in the culture medium, and beneath the monolayer. The cell surface proteoglycan consists of a lipophilic membrane-associated domain and an extracellular domain, or ectodomain, that contains both heparan and chondroitin sulfate chains. During culture, the cells release into the medium a soluble proteoglycan that is indistinguishable from the ectodomain released from the cells by trypsin treatment. This medium ectodomain was isolated, purified, and used as an antigen to prepare an affinity-purified serum antibody from rabbits. The antibody recognizes polypeptide determinants on the core protein of the ectodomain of the cell surface proteoglycan. The reactivity of this antibody was compared with that of a serum antibody (BM-1) directed against the low density basement membrane proteoglycan of the Englebarth-Holm-Swarm tumor (Hassell, J. R., W. C. Leyshon, S. R. Ledbetter, B. Tyree, S. Suzuki, M. Kato, K. Kimata, and H. Kleinman. 1985. J. Biol. Chem. 250:8098-8105). The BM-1 antibody recognized a large, low density heparan sulfate-rich proteoglycan in the cells and in the basal extracellular materials beneath the monolayer where it accumulated in patchy deposits. The affinity-purified anti-ectodomain antibody recognized the cell surface proteoglycan on the cells, where it is seen on apical cell surfaces in subconfluent cultures and in fine filamentous arrays at the basal cell surface in confluent cultures, but detected no proteoglycan in the basal extracellular materials beneath the monolayer. The amino acid composition of the purified medium ectodomain was substantially different from that reported for the basement membrane proteoglycan. Thus, NMuMG cells produce at least two heparan sulfate-rich proteoglycans that contain distinct core proteins, a cell surface proteoglycan, and a basement membrane proteoglycan. In newborn mouse skin, these proteoglycans localize to distinct sites; the basement membrane proteoglycan is seen solely at the dermal-epidermal boundary and the cell surface proteoglycan is seen solely at the surfaces of keratinocytes in the basal, spinous, and granular cell layers. These results suggest that although heparan sulfate-rich proteoglycans may have similar glycosaminoglycan chains, they are sorted by the epithelial cells to different sites on the basis of differences in their core proteins.  相似文献   

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