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1.
Gelatinase activity and inhibitory activity against collagenase were measured in serum-free medium conditioned by murine colonic carcinoma cells with different spontaneous metastatic potentials to the lung. The medium conditioned with poorly metastatic NM11 cells gave higher inhibitory activity than that conditioned with highly metastatic LuM1 cells, while the level of secreted gelatinases in the same medium was lower in NM11 medium than in LuM1 case. Northern analysis showed the higher gene expression of both tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases (TIMP)-1 and TIMP-2 in NM11 cells than in LuM1 cells, suggesting that both TIMPs are responsible for the increase of inhibitory activity in NM11 conditioned medium. Examination of the balance of gelatinases and inhibitor revealed that the amount of inhibitor exceeded that of gelatinases in the medium conditioned with NM11 cells. In contrast, the medium conditioned with LuM1 cells contained excess amounts of gelatinases. The results indicated a close correlation between the balance of gelatinases and inhibitors and the metastatic behavior of murine tumor cells.  相似文献   

2.
The syndecans comprise a family of cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans exhibiting complex biological functions involving the interaction of heparan sulfate side chains with a variety of soluble and insoluble heparin-binding extracellular ligands. Here we demonstrate an inverse correlation between the expression level of syndecan-2 and the metastatic potential of three clones derived from Lewis lung carcinoma 3LL. This correlation was proved to be a causal relationship, because transfection of syndecan-2 into the higher metastatic clone resulted in the suppression of both spontaneous and experimental metastases to the lung. Although the expression levels of matrix metalloproteinase-2 (MMP-2) and its cell surface activators, such as membrane-type 1 matrix metalloproteinase and tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase-2, were similar regardless of the metastatic potentials of the clones, elevated activation of MMP-2 was observed in the higher metastatic clone. Removal of heparan sulfate from the cell surface of low metastatic cells by treatment with heparitinase-I promoted MMP-2 activation, and transfection of syndecan-2 into highly metastatic cells suppressed MMP-2 activation. Furthermore, transfection of mutated syndecan-2 lacking glycosaminoglycan attachment sites into highly metastatic cells did not have any suppressive effect on MMP-2 activation, suggesting that this suppression was mediated by the heparan sulfate side chains of syndecan-2. Actually, MMP-2 was found to exhibit a strong binding ability to heparin, the dissociation constant value being 62 nM. These results indicate a novel function of syndecan-2, which acts as a suppressor for MMP-2 activation, causing suppression of metastasis in at least the metastatic system used in the present study.  相似文献   

3.
A cloned embryonic mouse cell line contained specific cell-surface receptors for heparin and both the number and affinity appeared to be unchanged in a simian-virus-40-transformed subclone. In competitive binding assays heparan sulphate from the control clone was bound preferentially compared to that from the transformed subclone, indicating that the altered sulphation of heparan sulphate from transformed cells results in a lowered affinity for cell-surface receptors. Evidence was obtained suggesting that endogenous proteoglycans were not held at the cell surface by binding to these receptors alone. However the possibility that proteoglycans embedded in the plasma membrane may interact with the receptor has not been ruled out.  相似文献   

4.
Many matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) are tightly bound to tissues; matrilysin (MMP-7), although the smallest of the MMPs, is one of the most tightly bound. The most likely docking molecules for MMP-7 are heparan sulfate proteoglycans on or around epithelial cells and in the underlying basement membrane. This is established by extraction experiments and confocal microscopy. The enzyme is extracted from homogenates of postpartum rat uterus by heparin/heparan sulfate and by heparinase III treatment. The enzyme is colocalized with heparan sulfate in the apical region of uterine glandular epithelial cells and can be released by heparinase digestion. Heparan sulfate and MMP-7 are expressed at similar stages of the rat estrous cycle. The strength of heparin binding by recombinant rat proMMP-7 was examined by affinity chromatography, affinity coelectrophoresis, and homogeneous enzyme-based binding assay; the K(D) is 5-10 nM. Zymographic measurement of MMP-7 activity is greatly enhanced by heparin. Two putative heparin-binding peptides have been identified near the C- and N-terminal regions of proMMP-7; however, molecular modeling suggests a more extensive binding track or cradle crossing multiple peptide strands. Evidence is also found for the binding of MMP-2, -9, and -13. Binding of MMP-7 and other MMPs to heparan sulfate in the extracellular space could prevent loss of secreted enzyme, provide a reservoir of latent enzyme, and facilitate cellular sensing and regulation of enzyme levels. Binding to the cell surface could position the enzyme for directed proteolytic attack, for activation of or by other MMPs and for regulation of other cell surface proteins. Dislodging MMPs by treatment with compounds such as heparin might be beneficial in attenuating excessive tissue breakdown such as occurs in cancer metastasis, arthritis, and angiogenesis.  相似文献   

5.
Fibroblast migration, proliferation, extracellular matrix protein synthesis and degradation are the key events in various biological and pathological processes in pulmonary fibrosis. In addition, biopsy specimens from the lungs of patients with pulmonary fibrosis show increased numbers of mast cells which have metachromatic granules containing heparin, histamine and proteases. Little is known about how these products influence pulmonary fibrosis. In the present study, we investigated the effect of heparin and related glycosaminoglycans on PDGF-induced lung fibroblast proliferation and chemotactic response in vitro. In addition, we examined the effect of heparin on both the induction of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) and MMPs activity in lung fibroblasts in vitro. Heparin, de-N-sulphated heparin but not heparan sulphate inhibited PDGF-induced lung fibroblast proliferation. In contrast, only heparin inhibited PDGF-stimulated human lung fibroblast chemotaxis. Negatively charged poly-L-glutamic acid had no effect on either fibroblast proliferation or chemotaxis. Thus the negative charge alone cannot account for the ant-proliferative and anti-chemotactic effects of heparin. Furthermore, heparin and heparan sulphate also had no inhibitory effect on induction of MMPS, including MMP-1 (interstitial collagenase), MMP-2 (gelatinase A) and MMP-9 (gelatinase B). Only heparin inhibited both MMP-1 and MMP-2/MMP-9 activity. Additionally, tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase type 1 (TIMP-1) and type 2 (TIMP-2) inhibited PDGF-stimulated human lung fibroblast chemotaxis. The ability of heparin to inhibit fibroblast chemotaxis may account for the inhibitory effect of heparin on MMP activity. The above results suggested that heparin and related glycosaminoglycans differentially regulate PDGF-induced lung fibroblast proliferation, chemotaxis and MMPs activity and further that these effects may have a key role in extracellular matrix remodeling in inflammatory lung disease.  相似文献   

6.
Proteoglycans mediate malaria sporozoite targeting to the liver   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
Malaria sporozoites are rapidly targeted to the liver where they pass through Kupffer cells and infect hepatocytes, their initial site of replication in the mammalian host. We show that sporozoites, as well as their major surface proteins, the CS protein and TRAP, recognize distinct cell type-specific surface proteoglycans from primary Kupffer cells, hepatocytes and stellate cells, but not from sinusoidal endothelia. Recombinant Plasmodium falciparum CS protein and TRAP bind to heparan sulphate on hepatocytes and both heparan and chondroitin sulphate proteoglycans on stellate cells. On Kupffer cells, CS protein predominantly recognizes chondroitin sulphate, whereas TRAP binding is glycosaminoglycan independent. Plasmodium berghei sporozoites attach to heparan sulphate on hepatocytes and stellate cells, whereas Kupffer cell recognition involves both chondroitin sulphate and heparan sulphate proteoglycans. CS protein also interacts with secreted proteoglycans from stellate cells, the major producers of extracellular matrix in the liver. In situ binding studies using frozen liver sections indicate that the majority of the CS protein binding sites are associated with these matrix proteoglycans. Our data suggest that sporozoites are first arrested in the sinusoid by binding to extracellular matrix proteoglycans and then recognize proteoglycans on the surface of Kupffer cells, which they use to traverse the sinusoidal cell barrier.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
Circulating macrophages and metastatic tumor cells can penetrate the vascular endothelium and migrate from the circulatory system to extravascular compartments. Both activated murine macrophages and different metastatic tumor cells (B16-BL6 melanoma; ESb T-lymphoma) attach, invade, and penetrate confluent vascular endothelial cell monlayer in vitro, by degrading heparan sulfate proteoglycans in the subendothelial extracellular matrix. The sensitivity of the enzymes from the various sources degrading the heparan sulfate proteoglycan was challenged and compared by a series of inhibitors. Activated macrophages demonstrate a heparanase with an endoglycosidase activity that cleaves from the [35S]O4 = -labeled heparan sulfate proteoglycans of the extracellular matrix 10 kDa glycosaminoglycan fragments. The macrophages do not store the heparanase intracellularly but it is instead found pericellularly and requires a continuous cell-matrix contact at the optimal pH for maintaining cell growth. The degradation of [35S]O4 = -labeled extracellular matrix proteoglycans by the macrophages' heparanase is significantly inhibited in the presence of heparan sulfate (10 micrograms/ml), arteparon (10 micrograms/ml), and heparin at a concentration of 3 micrograms/ml. In contrast, other glycosaminoglycans such as hyaluronic acid, dermatan sulfate, and chondroitin sulfate as well as the specific inhibitor of exo-beta-glucuronidase D-saccharic acid 1,4-lactone failed to inhibit the degradation of sulfated proteoglycans in the subendothelial extracellular matrix. Degradation of this heparan sulfate proteoglycan is a two-step sequential process involving protease activity followed by heparanase activity. However, the following antiproteases--alpha 2-macroglobulin, antithrombin III, leupeptin, and phenylmethylsulfony fluoride (PMSF)--failed to inhibit this degradation process, and only alpha 1-antitrypsin inhibited the heparanase activity. B16-BL6 metastatic melanoma cell heparanase, which is also a cell-associated enzyme, was inhibited by heparin to the same extent as the macrophage heparanase. On the other hand, heparanase of the highly metastatic variant (ESb) of a methylcholanthrene-induced T lymphoma, which is an extracellular enzyme released by the cells to the incubation medium, was more sensitive to heparin and arteparon than the macrophages' heparanase, inhibited at concentrations of 1 and 3 micrograms/ml, respectively. These results may indicate the potential use of heparin or other glycosaminoglycans as specific and differential inhibitors for the formation in certain cases of blood-borne tumor metastasis.  相似文献   

9.
Maintenance of fibroblasts in 0.5% serum results in viable but non-proliferative cells that may be analogous to fibroblasts in vivo. The synthesis of proteoglycans by human embryo lung fibroblasts in Eagle's minimal essential medium with 0.5% newborn-bovine serum or with 10% serum has been compared. A similar amount of [35S]sulphate-labelled glycosaminoglycan per cell was secreted by fibroblasts in 10% or 0.5% serum. 35SO42-incorporation into sulphated glycosaminoglycans was enhanced in 0.5% serum when expressed per mg of cell protein, but [3H]glucosamine incorporation was decreased. The charge density of these glycosaminoglycans was not changed as determined by ion-exchange chromatography. It was concluded that decreased protein/ cell resulted in an apparent increase in 35S-labelled glycosaminoglycan synthesis/mg of cell protein, whereas decreased uptake of [3H]glucosamine resulted in a decrease in their glucosamine labelling. The proteoglycans secreted by fibroblasts in 0.5% serum were similar in glycosaminoglycan composition, chain length and buoyant density to the dermatan sulphate proteoglycan, which is the major secreted component of cells in 10% serum. Larger heparan sulphate and chondroitin sulphate proteoglycans, which comprise about 40% of the total secreted proteoglycans of cultures in 10% serum, were greatly diminished in the medium of cultures in 0.5% serum. The proteoglycan profile of medium from density-inhibited cultures in 10% serum resembles that of proliferating cultures, indicating that lack of proliferation was not responsible for the alteration. The dermatan sulphate proteoglycan, participating in extracellular matrix structure, may be the primary tissue product of lung fibroblasts in vivo.  相似文献   

10.
Yersiniae are equipped with the Yop virulon, an apparatus that allows extracellular bacteria to deliver toxic Yop proteins inside the host cell cytosol in order to sabotage the communication networks of the host cell or even to cause cell death. LcrG is a component of the Yop virulon involved in the regulation of secretion of the Yops. In this paper, we show that LcrG can bind HeLa cells, and we analyse the role of proteoglycans in this phenomenon. Treatment of the HeLa cells with heparinase I, but not chondroitinase ABC, led to inhibition of binding. Competition assays indicated that heparin and dextran sulphate strongly inhibited binding, but that other glycosaminoglycans did not. This demonstrated that binding of HeLa cells to purified LcrG is caused by heparan sulphate proteoglycans. LcrG could bind directly to heparin-agarose beads and, in agreement with these results, analysis of the protein sequence of Yersinia enterocolitica LcrG revealed heparin-binding motifs. In vitro production and secretion by Y . enterocolitica of the Yops was unaffected by the addition of heparin. However, the addition of exogenous heparin decreased the level of YopE–Cya translocation into HeLa cells. A similar decrease was seen with dextran sulphate, whereas the other glycosaminoglycans tested had no significant effect. Translocation was also decreased by treatment of HeLa cells with heparinitase, but not with chondroitinase. Thus, heparan sulphate proteoglycans have an important role to play in translocation. The interaction between LcrG and heparan sulphate anchored at the surface of HeLa cells could be a signal triggering deployment of the Yop translocation machinery. This is the first report of a eukaryotic receptor interacting with the type III secretion and associated translocation machinery of Yersinia or of other bacteria.  相似文献   

11.
Thrombospondin 1 (TSP1) was first recognized as a thrombin-sensitive protein associated with platelet membranes. It is secreted by numerous cell types and its expression is predominant in areas of active tissue remodeling. Thrombospondins 1 and 2 are large, trimeric, matricellular proteins, composed of multiple structural motifs which interact with a diverse array of receptors and molecules. Thrombospondin's capacity to bind multiple receptors renders it multifunctional. The functions of its isolated domains can be overlapping or contradictory. In this review, we focus on the N-terminus of the molecule, first recognized for its strong heparin binding properties and characterized by its susceptibility to proteolytic cleavage from the stalk region of thrombospondin. The N-terminus, called the heparin binding domain (HBD), interacts with a variety of macromolecules including heparan sulfate proteoglycans at the membrane and in the matrix, LDL receptor-related protein (LRP), sulfated glycolipids, calreticulin, and integrins. The HBD mediates endocytosis of thrombospondin. It functions both as a soluble and an insoluble modulator of cell adhesion and motility. In contrast to thrombospondin, the HBD has pro-angiogenic activity. We propose that the HBD of thrombospondins 1 and 2 are found primarily in the cellular microenvironment in conditions of cellular injury, stress and tissue remodeling and that the HBD conveys multiple signals involved in cellular adaptation to injury.  相似文献   

12.
Heparin affin regulatory peptide (HARP) is a polypeptide belonging to a family of heparin binding growth/differentiation factors. The high affinity of HARP for heparin suggests that this secreted polypeptide should also bind to heparan sulfate proteoglycans derived from cell surface and extracellular matrix defined as extracellular compartments. Using Western blot analysis, we detected HARP bound to heparan sulfate proteoglycans in the extracellular compartments of MDA-MB 231 and MC 3T3-E1 as well as NIH3T3 cells overexpressing HARP protein. Heparitinase treatment of BEL cells inhibited HARP-induced cell proliferation, and the biological activity of HARP in this system was restored by the addition of heparin. We report that heparan sulfate, dermatan sulfate, and to a lesser extent, chondroitin sulfate A, displaced HARP bound to the extracellular compartment. Binding analyses with a biosensor showed that HARP bound heparin with fast association and dissociation kinetics (kass = 1.6 x 10(6) M-1 s-1; kdiss = 0.02 s-1), yielding a Kd value of 13 nM; the interaction between HARP and dermatan sulfate was characterized by slower association kinetics (kass = 0.68 x 10(6) M-1 s-1) and a lower affinity (Kd = 51 nM). Exogenous heparin, heparan sulfate, and dermatan sulfate potentiated the growth-stimulatory activity of HARP, suggesting that corresponding proteoglycans could be involved in the regulation of the mitogenic activity of HARP.  相似文献   

13.
14.
15.
Heparan sulfate proteoglycans in invasion and metastasis   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Because heparan sulfate proteoglycans mediate cell adhesion and control the activities of numerous growth and motility factors, they play a critical role in regulating the metastatic behavior of tumor cells. Due to their utilitarian nature, heparan sulfate proteoglycans may at times act as inhibitors of cell invasion and at other times as promoters of cell invasion, with their function being determined by their location (cell surface or extracellular matrix), the heparin-binding molecules they associate with, the presence of modifying enzymes (proteases, heparanases) and the precise structural characteristics of the proteoglycan. Also, the tissue type and pathophysiological state of the tumor influence proteogylcan function. This review summarizes our current knowledge of the role heparan sulfate proteoglycans play in regulating tumor cell metastasis, proposes mechanisms of how these molecules function and examines the potential for discovery of new therapeutic approaches designed to block metastatic cancer.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
The conservation of positively charged residues in the N terminus of the hepatitis C virus (HCV) envelope glycoprotein E2 suggests an interaction of the viral envelope with cell surface glycosaminoglycans. Using recombinant envelope glycoprotein E2 and virus-like particles as ligands for cellular binding, we demonstrate that cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPG) play an important role in mediating HCV envelope-target cell interaction. Heparin and liver-derived highly sulfated heparan sulfate but not other soluble glycosaminoglycans inhibited cellular binding and entry of virus-like particles in a dose-dependent manner. Degradation of cell surface heparan sulfate by pretreatment with heparinases resulted in a marked reduction of viral envelope protein binding. Surface plasmon resonance analysis demonstrated a high affinity interaction (KD 5.2 x 10-9 m) of E2 with heparin, a structural homologue of highly sulfated heparan sulfate. Deletion of E2 hypervariable region-1 reduced E2-heparin interaction suggesting that positively charged residues in the N-terminal E2 region play an important role in mediating E2-HSPG binding. In conclusion, our results demonstrate for the first time that cellular binding of HCV envelope requires E2-HSPG interaction. Docking of E2 to cellular HSPG may be the initial step in the interaction between HCV and the cell surface resulting in receptor-mediated entry and initiation of infection.  相似文献   

18.
Heparin is known to bind to cultured endothelial cells. This report documents that addition of heparin to endothelial cells results in an alteration of the heparan sulfate proteoglycan synthetic pattern. Specifically, the addition of saturating amounts of heparin to confluent cultures of porcine aortic endothelial cells results in an increase in the amount of radiolabeled heparan sulfate proteoglycan secreted into the growth medium. The increase is apparent as early as 8 h after heparin administration. Although there is often a decrease in the amount of cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycan produced, it is not sufficient to account for the increase in the secreted form. Of the other glycosaminoglycans tested, only dextran sulfate and commercial heparan sulfate induce changes in heparan sulfate proteoglycan synthesis and secretion. Chondroitin sulfate glycosaminoglycans do not elicit this synthetic change. These data indicate that endothelial cells can alter the synthesis of heparan sulfate proteoglycans in response to extracellular signals including heparin and related glycosaminoglycans.  相似文献   

19.
Heparanase is an endoglycosidase that specifically cleaves heparan sulphate side chains of heparan sulphate proteoglycans, activity that is strongly implicated in cell migration and invasion associated with tumour metastasis, angiogenesis and inflammation. Heparanase up-regulation was documented in an increasing number of human carcinomas, correlating with reduced post-operative survival rate and enhanced tumour angiogenesis. Expression and significance of heparanase in human sarcomas has not been so far reported. Here, we applied the Ewing's sarcoma cell line TC71 and demonstrated a potent inhibition of cell invasion in vitro and tumour xenograft growth in vivo upon treatment with a specific inhibitor of heparanase enzymatic activity (compound SST0001, non-anticoagulant N-acetylated, glycol split heparin). Next, we examined heparanase expression and cellular localization by immunostaining of a cohort of 69 patients diagnosed with Ewing's sarcoma. Heparanase staining was noted in all patients. Notably, heparanase staining intensity correlated with increased tumour size (P = 0.04) and with patients' age (P = 0.03), two prognostic factors associated with a worse outcome. Our study indicates that heparanase expression is induced in Ewing's sarcoma and associates with poor prognosis. Moreover, it encourages the inclusion of heparanase inhibitors (i.e. SST0001) in newly developed therapeutic modalities directed against Ewing's sarcoma and likely other malignancies.  相似文献   

20.
Biosynthetically radiolabelled heparan sulphate proteoglycans have been isolated from the growth medium and the cell lysate of a human neuroblastoma cell line (CHP100). Chromatography on Sepharose CL-4B identified two heparan sulphate proteoglycans in the medium (Kav 0.220 and 0.389), whereas in the cell lysate the major proteoglycan species were more heterogenous and of a smaller overall molecular size (Kav 0.407) than the medium-derived counterparts. Chromatography on Sepharose CL-6B of free heparan sulphate glycosaminoglycan chains showed that the majority of cell-layer-derived material heparan sulphate 2, Kav = 0.509) was smaller than medium heparan sulphates (heparan sulphate 1 and heparan sulphate 2, Kav 0.230 and 0.317). Analysis of the patterns of polymer sulphation by nitrous acid treatment, gel chromatography and high-voltage electrophoresis established that in each heparan sulphate fraction there was on average 1.1 sulphate residues per disaccharide with an N:O sulphate ratio of 1.1. Heparan sulphate in the medium had a high proportion of di-O-sulphated disaccharides in regions of the chain with repeat disaccharide sequences of structure GlcA-GlcNSO3, whereas cell-associated material was enriched in di-O-sulphated tetrasaccharides of alternating sequences GlcA-GlcNAc-GlcA-GlcNSO3. The identification of several populations of heparan sulphate proteoglycans differing in molecular size and glycosaminoglycan fine structure may reflect the functional diversity of this family of macromolecules in the nervous system.  相似文献   

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