首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 46 毫秒
1.
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   

2.
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   

3.
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   

4.
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   

5.
Abstract: The binding of the amyloid protein precursor (APP) to heparan sulfate proteoglycans has been shown to stimulate the neurite-promoting activity of APP. In this study, proteoglycans that bind with high affinity to APP were characterized. Conditioned medium from cultures of postnatal day 3 mouse brain cells was applied to an affinity column containing a peptide homologous to a heparin-binding domain of APP. A fraction 17-fold enriched in proteoglycans was recovered by elution with a salt gradient. APP bound saturably and with high affinity to the affinity-purified proteoglycan fraction. Scatchard analysis of the binding showed that APP bound to high- and low-affinity sites with equilibrium dissociation constants of 1.4 × 10−11 and 6.5 × 10−10 M , respectively. APP, in conjunction with the affinity-purified proteoglycan fraction, promoted neurite outgrowth. The affinity-purified proteoglycan fraction contained a heparan sulfate proteoglycan and a chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan. Digestion of the affinity-purified fraction with heparitinase I revealed a core protein of 63–69-kDa molecular mass, whereas digestion with chondroitinase ABC revealed a core protein of 100–110 kDa. The results suggest that expression of specific APP-binding proteoglycans may be an important step in the regulation of the neurite outgrowth-promoting activity of APP.  相似文献   

6.
After extraction with 4 M guanidinium chloride and purification by DEAE-cellulose chromatography, the heparan sulfate proteoglycan (HSPG) of calf anterior lens capsule was found to consist of two immunologically related components (Mr = 340,000 and 250,000) which upon deglycosylation with trifluoromethanesulfonic acid yielded core proteins with Mr values of 170,000 and 145,000. The heparan sulfate chains were uniform in size (Mr = 14,000) and manifested a clustering of sulfate groups in a peripheral domain. From the decrease in Mr observed after heparitinase digestion, it could be estimated that 6 and 11 glycosaminoglycan chains were present in the Mr = 250,000 and 340,000 components respectively. The occurrence of N-linked oligosaccharides was evident from the size difference of the heparitinase- and trifluoromethane-sulfonic acid-treated proteoglycans (approximately 20 kDa), as well as from the presence of a substantial number of mannose residues; furthermore, interaction of the capsule proteoglycan with Bandeiraea simplicifolia I suggested that these carbohydrate units contains terminal alpha-D-Gal groups. Cultured lens epithelial cells deposited a single [35S]sulfate-labeled proteoglycan into their matrix (Mr = 400,000) which was immunologically related to the lens capsule proteoglycan and contained only heparan sulfate chains. In addition to this component, the medium from these cells contained an immunologically unrelated HSPG (Mr = 150,000) as well as a chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan (Mr = 240,000). Examination of bovine glomeruli indicated that, in addition to the previously described 200-kDa HSPG, an immunologically related 350-kDa component was also present. This size heterogeneity, which is comparable to that seen in the lens capsule, is most readily attributable to proteolytic processing of a precursor molecule. Studies with polyclonal antibodies demonstrated only limited cross-reactivities between the Engelbreth-Holms-Swarm proteoglycan and the components from lens capsule and glomerular basement membrane; since even the latter two differed somewhat in their antigenic sites, it would appear that cell- and species-dictated genetic differences as well as post-translational events contribute to the diversity observed in basement membrane HSPGs.  相似文献   

7.
The proteoglycans extracted from adult chicken were initially purified by DEAE-chromatography. Digestion of these proteoglycans with chondroitinase ABC generated a single 40-kDa core protein while digestion with keratanase generated a single 52-kDa core protein. Digestion with both enzymes combined, however, increased the amount of 40-kDa core protein produced. This suggested that the 40-kDa core protein exists with chondroitin/dermatan sulfate (C/DS) side chains alone and with both C/DS and keratan sulfate (KS) side chains. The proteoglycan fraction was initially digested with chondroitinase ABC, and the M(r) = 40,000 core protein derived from proteoglycans containing C/DS side chains alone was isolated. Amino-terminal sequencing showed it to be the chick cognate of decorin. The remaining proteoglycans were then digested with keratanase, and both the 40-kDa core protein and the 52-kDa core proteins derived from KS-containing proteoglycans were purified. The M(r) = 40,000 core protein derived from proteoglycans containing both C/DS and KS side chains had the same amino-terminal sequence as decorin and cross-reacted with antibodies to decorin. Sequence from the 52-kDa core protein derived from KS-containing proteoglycans showed it to be lumican. The results of this study suggest that adult chick corneas contain two isoforms of decorin: one containing C/DS side chains and the other, a hybrid, containing both C/DS and KS side chains. Embryonic corneas did not contain the hybrid isoform of decorin. These results suggest that different post-translational modifications occur to the decorin gene product during corneal development and maturation.  相似文献   

8.
We have studied the affinity between fibroblast proteoheparan sulfate (medium- and cell surface-derived species) and heparan sulfate-agaroses by affinity chromatography. The evidence for an interaction between the heparan sulfate side chains of the proteoglycans and the immobilized heparan sulfate are as follows: (a) the individual side chains released from the proteoglycan by papain bind to the affinity matrix, (b) the bound proteoglycans are desorbed by a solution of cognate heparan sulfate chains, and (c) the core protein obtained by heparan sulfate-lyase digestion of the proteoglycan does not bind to the affinity matrix. The proteoglycans interact only with one subtype of heparan sulfate. The binding of free heparan sulfate chains to the affinity matrix is completely abolished by heparan sulfate oligosaccharides provided they are composed of both iduronate- and glucuronate-containing disaccharide sequences.  相似文献   

9.
A large, low-density form of heparan sulfate proteoglycan was isolated from the Engelbreth-Holm-Swarm (EHS) tumor and demonstrated to bind in immobilized-ligand assays to laminin fragment E3, collagen type IV, fibronectin and nidogen. The first three ligands mainly recognize the heparan sulfate chains, as shown by inhibition with heparin and heparan sulfate and by the failure to bind to the proteoglycan protein core. Nidogen, obtained from the EHS tumor or in recombinant form, binds exclusively to the protein core in a heparin-insensitive manner. Studies with other laminin fragments indicate that the fragment E3 possesses a unique binding site of laminin for the proteoglycan. A major binding site of nidogen was localized to its central globular domain G2 by using overlapping fragments. This allows for the formation of ternary complexes between laminin, nidogen and proteoglycan, suggesting a key role for nidogen in basement-membrane assembly. Evidence is provided for a second proteoglycan-binding site in the C-terminal globule G3 of nidogen, but this interaction prevents the formation of such ternary complexes. Therefore, the G3-mediated nidogen binding to laminin and proteoglycan are mutually exclusive.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
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   

12.
Sequence analysis showed that Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease cleaved the core protein of the small dermatan sulfate proteoglycan of bovine tendon (PGII) on the carboxy side of a glutamic acid residue located 17 amino acids from the N-terminus of the intact molecule. The remaining 40 kDa core protein fragment inhibited collagen fibrillogenesis in an in vitro assay. V8 protease readily generated this fragment in tendon tissue, but it was not released from the tissue during treatment. These results indicate that neither the 17-amino acid N-terminal peptide nor the glycosaminoglycan chain attached to this peptide is required for maintaining the interaction of this proteoglycan with a collagen matrix.  相似文献   

13.
After chondroitinase digestion of bovine nasal and tracheal cartilage proteoglycans, subsequent treatment with trypsin or trypsin followed by chymotrypsin yielded two major types of polypeptide-glycosaminoglycan fragments which could be separated by Sepharose 6B chromatography. One fragment, located close to the hyaluronic acid-binding region of the protein core, had a high relative keratan sulfate content. This fragment contained about 60% of the total keratan sulfate, but less than 10% of the total chondroitin sulfate present in the original proteoglycan preparation. The weight average molecular weight of the keratan sulfate-enriched fragment was 122,000, as determined by sedimentation equilibrium centrifugation. The chemical and physical data indicate that this fragment contains an average of 10 to 15 keratan sulfate chains, if the average molecular weight of individual chains is assumed to be about 8,000, and about 5 chondroitin sulfate chains attached to a peptide of about 20,000 daltons. The other population of fragments was derived from the other end of the proteoglycan molecule, the chondroitin sulfate-enriched region, and contained mainly chondroitin sulfate chains. About 90% of the total chondroitin sulfate, but only 20 to 30% of the total keratan sulfate was recovered in these fragments. On the average, approximately 5 chondroitin sulfate chains and 1 keratan sulfate chain could be linked to the same peptide. Another 10 to 20% of the total keratan sulfate, originally found in or near the hyaluronic acid-binding region, was not separated from the chondroitin sulfate-enriched fragments. Hydroxylamine could be used to liberate a large molecular size, chondroitin sulfate-enriched fragment (Kav 0.54 on Sepharose 2B) from the proteoglycan aggregates. The remainder of the protein core, containing the keratan sulfate-enriched region, was bound to hyaluronic acid with the link proteins and recovered in the void volume on the Sepharose 2B column.  相似文献   

14.
H J Goren  M F White  C R Kahn 《Biochemistry》1987,26(8):2374-2382
We have studied the structure and function of the solubilized insulin receptor before and after partial proteolytic digestion to define domains in the beta-subunit that undergo autophosphorylation and contain the tyrosine kinase activity. Wheat germ agglutinin purified insulin receptor from Fao cells was digested briefly at 22 degrees C with low concentrations (5-10 micrograms/mL, pH 7.4) of trypsin, staphylococcal V8 protease, or elastase. Autophosphorylation of the beta-subunit was carried out before and after digestion, and the [32P]phosphoproteins were separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, detected by autoradiography, and analyzed by tryptic peptide mapping by use of reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography. Mild trypsin digestion reduced the apparent molecular mass of the beta-subunit from 95 to 85 kDa, and then to 70 kDa. The 85-kDa fragment was not immunoprecipitated by an antibody directed against the C-terminal domain of the beta-subunit (alpha Pep-1), indicating that this region of the receptor was lost. The 85-kDa fragment contained about half of the [32P]phosphate originally found in the beta-subunit, and tryptic peptide mapping showed that two major tryptic phosphopeptides (previously called pY2 and pY3) were removed. Three other tryptic phosphopeptides (pY1, pY1a, and pY4) were found in the 85- and 70-kDa fragments. Treatment of the intact receptor with staphylococcal V8 protease also converted the beta-subunit to an 85-kDa fragment that did not bind to alpha Pep-1, contained about 50% of the initial radioactivity, and lacked pY2 and pY3. Elastase rapidly degraded the receptor to inactive fragments between 37 and 50 kDa.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
To characterize proteoglycans in the prechondrogenic limb bud, proteoglycans were extracted with 4 M guanidine HCl containing a detergent and protease inhibitors from Day 13 fetal rat limb buds which had been labeled with [35S]sulfate for 3 h in vitro. About 90% of 35S-labeled proteoglycans was solubilized under the conditions used. The proteoglycan preparation was separated by DEAE-Sephacel column chromatography into three peaks; peak I eluted at 0.45 M NaCl concentration, peak II at 0.52 M, and peak III at 1.4 M. Peaks I and III were identified as proteoglycans bearing heparan sulfate side chains. The heparan sulfate proteoglycan in peak III was larger in hydrodynamic size than the proteoglycan in peak I. The heparan sulfate side chains of peak III proteoglycan were smaller in the size and more abundant in N-sulfated glucosamine than those of peak I proteoglycan. Peak II contained a chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan with a core protein of a doublet of Mr 550,000 and 500,000. The chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan was easily solubilized with a physiological salt solution and the heparan sulfate proteoglycan in peak I was partially solubilized with the physiological salt solution. The remainder of the proteoglycan in peak I and the heparan sulfate proteoglycan in peak III could be solubilized effectively only with a solution containing a detergent, such as nonanoyl-N-methylglucamide. This observation indicates the difference in the localization among these three proteoglycans in the developing rat limb bud.  相似文献   

17.
Preparations of small proteoglycans from bovine tendon, bone, and cartilage have been compared for sensitivity to various enzymes and reactivity with different polyclonal antibodies. Chondroitinase ABC digestion of all proteoglycans generated a core protein preparation that migrated similarly in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide electrophoresis as a doublet band with Mr approximately equal to 45,000. The small proteoglycans of cartilage were divided into two populations based upon electrophoretic migration of the intact molecules (Rosenberg, L. C., Choi, H. U., Tank, L-H., Johnson, T. L., Pal, S., Webber, C., Reiner, A., and Poole, A. R. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 6304-6313). The core preparations of tendon, bone, and the faster-migrating (PG II) proteoglycans of cartilage all interacted in Western blot/enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay analysis with polyclonal antibody raised against either the tendon or bone proteoglycans. The slower-migrating (PG I) proteoglycans of cartilage did not react with these antibodies. Digestion of the tendon small proteoglycan with Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease released glycosaminoglycan chains from the molecule and generated a 40-kDa protein fragment that was resistant to further rapid degradation by the enzyme. This large digestion fragment was also prominent following V8 protease digestion of the faster-migrating (PG II) population of small cartilage proteoglycans, but not the small proteoglycan of bone. The N-terminal amino acid sequence of the tendon (PG II) proteoglycan was determined. These observations provide additional evidence for heterogeneity among the chemically similar small proteoglycans from different tissues.  相似文献   

18.
More than 60% of brain chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans were extracted from 10-day-old rat brains by homogenization in ice-cold phosphate-buffered saline containing protease inhibitors. Although the soluble proteoglycan preparation was a mixture of chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans with a different hydrodynamic size as well as a different molecular density, each subfraction of the proteoglycans contained chondroitin sulfate side chains with virtually identical molecular weight (approximately 15,000) and chondroitin sulfate disaccharide composition (high content of 4-sulfate unit). Digestion of the purified proteoglycan preparation with protease-free chondroitinase ABC produced five core proteins with Mr = 250,000 (designated as 250K protein), 220,000 (220K), 150,000 (150K), 130,000 (130K), and 93,000 (93K). All these core proteins were obtained from chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan preparations extracted from various regions of the brain, but their composition varied among different brain regions. Analysis for amino acid composition of these core proteins and two-dimensional mapping of their proteolytic peptides revealed that three major core proteins (250K, 220K, and 150K proteins) were structurally different. These observations indicate that at least three distinct types of chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan occur in the developing rat brain.  相似文献   

19.
We demonstrate that the cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycan of human colon carcinoma cells has an affinity for a hydrophobic matrix. This property is mediated by sequences in the core protein, since papain-or alkaline borohydride-released heparan sulfate chains do not bind to the matrix. Trypsin releases a [3H]leucine-rich, unsulfated, hydrophobic peptide, with Mr approximately 5000. This domain is present in neither the proteoglycan released into the medium nor in the intracellular degradation products. It is proposed that this peptide may represent the portion of the core protein intercalated into the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

20.
A proteoglycan was isolated from fetal membranes which had been separated from human postpartum placenta. The glycosaminoglycan side chains (Mr = 55,000) were found to be composed of 75% chondroitin sulfate and 23% dermatan sulfate as determined by chondroitinase ABC or AC II digestion. NH2-terminal microsequencing of the intact proteoglycan revealed a single amino acid sequence of (sequence; see text) A rabbit antiserum raised against the intact proteoglycan reacted in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis immunoblotting with Mr = 45,000 and 43,000 core polypeptides from chondroitinase-treated proteoglycan. Affinity-purified antibodies from this antiserum precipitated from human embryonic fibroblast culture fluid a proteoglycan which has an approximate Mr = 120,000 in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. This proteoglycan has on the average two polysaccharide side chains. As defined by chondroitinase digestion, these chains consist of 66% dermatan sulfate and 20% chondroitin sulfate. Digestion of the glycosaminoglycan with chondroitinase ABC converted the proteoglycan to a Mr = 45,000 major and a Mr = 43,000 minor core polypeptide. Tissue immunofluorescence localized the proteoglycan to interstitial matrices, suggesting that it is a product of mesenchymal cells. The methods we have devised for the purification of the fetal membrane proteoglycan in chemical amounts and the antibodies we have prepared against it will allow studies on the structural and functional properties of the proteoglycan and on the expression of immunologically cross-reactive proteoglycans by various cells and tissues.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号