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1.
Follistatin, an activin-binding protein secreted by cultured rat granulosa cells, was shown to associate with the cell surface by affinity labeling with 125I-activin. Addition of follistatin to the cultured cells demonstrated a typical ligand-binding saturation curve, suggesting that granulosa cells have a specific binding site for follistatin. This binding was markedly inhibited by heparin and heparan sulfate, but not by chondroitin sulfates A and C, keratan sulfate, and dermatan sulfate. When granulosa cells were treated with glycosaminoglycan-degrading enzymes before or after addition of follistatin to the cultures, heparinase and heparitinase treatments resulted in significant suppression of the binding, whereas treatment with chondroitinase ABC had no effect. A competition study of the binding using heparin derivatives demonstrated that follistatin seemed to recognize O-sulfate groups in the heparin molecule. Heparitinase-treated granulosa cells exhibited almost full responsiveness to activin, indicating that the enzyme treatment had no effect on activin and receptor interaction. These results suggest that follistatin/activin-binding protein binds to heparan sulfate side chains of proteoglycans on the granulosa cell surface to regulate the various actions of activin.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
Metastatic ovarian carcinoma metastasizes by intra-peritoneal, non-hematogenous dissemination. The adhesion of the ovarian carcinoma cells to extracellular matrix components, such as types I and III collagen and cellular fibronectin, is essential for intra-peritoneal dissemination. The purpose of this study was to determine whether cell surface proteoglycans (a class of matrix receptors) are produced by ovarian carcinoma cells, and whether these proteoglycans have a role in the adhesion of ovarian carcinoma cells to types I and III collagen and fibronectin. Proteoglycans were metabolically labeled for biochemical studies. Both phosphatidylinositol-anchored and integral membrane-type cell surface proteoglycans were found to be present on the SK-OV-3 and NIH:OVCAR-3 cell lines. Three proteoglycan populations of differing hydrodynamic size were detected in both SK-OV-3 and NIH:OVCAR-3 cells. Digestions with heparitinase and chondroitinase ABC showed that cell surface proteoglycans of SK-OV-3 cells had higher proportion of chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans (75:25 of chondroitin sulfate:heparan sulfate ratio), while NIH:OVCAR-3 cells had higher proportion of heparan sulfate proteoglycans (10:90 of chondroitin sulfate:heparan sulfate ratio). RT-PCR indicated the synthesis of a unique assortment of syndecans, glypicans, and CD44 by the two cell lines. In adhesion assays performed on matrix-coated titer plates both cell lines adhered to types I and III collagen and cellular fibronectin, and cell adhesion was inhibited by preincubation of the matrix with heparin, heparan sulfate, chondroitin sulfate, dermatan sulfate, or chondroitin glycosaminoglycans. Treatment of the cells with heparitinase, chondroitinase ABC, or methylumbelliferyl xyloside also interfered with adhesion confirming the role of both heparan sulfate and chondroitin sulfate cell surface proteoglycans as matrix receptors on ovarian carcinoma cells.  相似文献   

4.
The purification of two heparitinases and a heparinase, in high yields from Flavobacterium heparinum was achieved by a combination of molecular sieving and cation-exchange chromatography. Heparinase acts upon N-sulfated glucosaminido-L-iduronic acid linkages of heparin. Substitution of N-sulfate by N-acetyl groups renders the heparin molecule resistant to degradation by the enzyme. Heparitinase I acts on N-acetylated or N-sulfated glucosaminido-glucuronic acid linkages of the heparan sulfate. Sulfate groups at the 6-position of the glucosamine moiety of the heparan sulfate chains seem to be impeditive for heparitinase I action. Heparitinase II acts upon heparan sulfate producing disulfated, N-sulfated and N-acetylated-6-sulfated disaccharides, and small amounts of N-acetylated disaccharide. These and other results suggest that heparitinase II acts preferentially upon N,6-sulfated glucosaminido-glucuronic acid linkages. The total degradation of heparan sulfate is only achieved by the combined action of both heparitinases. The 13C NMR spectra of the disaccharides formed from heparan sulfate and a heparin oligosaccharide formed by the action of the heparitinases are in accordance to the proposed mode of action of the enzymes. Comparative studies of the enzymes with the commercially available heparinase and heparitinase are described.  相似文献   

5.
When shed from the cell surface, the heparan sulfate proteoglycan syndecan-1 can facilitate the growth, angiogenesis, and metastasis of tumors. Here we report that tumor cell expression of heparanase, an enzyme known to be a potent promoter of tumor progression and metastasis, regulates both the level and location of syndecan-1 within the tumor microenvironment by enhancing its synthesis and subsequent shedding from the tumor cell surface. Heparanase regulation of syndecan-1 is detected in both human myeloma and breast cancer cell lines. This regulation requires the presence of active enzyme, because mutated forms of heparanase lacking heparan sulfate-degrading activity failed to influence syndecan-1 expression or shedding. Removal of heparan sulfate from the cell surface using bacterial heparitinase dramatically accelerated syndecan-1 shedding, suggesting that the effects of heparanase on syndecan-1 expression by tumor cells may be due, at least in part, to enzymatic removal or reduction in the size of heparan sulfate chains. Animals bearing tumors formed from cells expressing high levels of heparanase or animals transgenic for heparanase expression exhibited elevated levels of serum syndecan-1 as compared with controls, indicating that heparanase regulation of syndecan-1 expression and shedding can occur in vivo and impact cancer progression and perhaps other pathological states. These results reveal a new mechanism by which heparanase promotes an aggressive tumor phenotype and suggests that heparanase and syndecan-1 act synergistically to fine tune the tumor microenvironment and ensure robust tumor growth.  相似文献   

6.
Cultured arterial smooth muscle cells synthesize a cell-associated heparan sulfate proteoglycan which consists of a 92 kDa core protein with 3 to 4 heparan sulfate side chains covalently attached. Biosynthesis of the cell-associated heparan sulfate proteoglycan was compared in proliferating and in non-dividing vascular smooth muscle cells which are preincubated in the presence of [35]sulfate or a combination of [35S]methionine and [3H]glucosamine. The Mr of the core protein was identical in either growth state, but changes in the structure of the heparan sulfate side chains were observed. Non-dividing (postconfluent) arterial smooth muscle cells form longer heparan sulfate chains with a higher proportion of hydrophobic (N-acetyl) groups than proliferating (preconfluent) cells as judged from gel filtration experiments, hydrophobic interaction chromatography and heparitinase degradation. An enzyme preparation from proliferating cells catalyzes deacetylation and N-sulfation of heparan sulfate at a 5-fold higher activity than from non-dividing cells. Cell density-dependent structural differences of heparan sulfate are related to the finding that heparan sulfate isolated from non-dividing cells has a 10-fold higher antiproliferative potency than heparan sulfate from proliferating (preconfluent) cells.  相似文献   

7.
The medium and cell surface heparan sulfates isolated from SV40-transformed Swiss mouse 3T3 cells were examined in the presence and absence of 1.0 mM p-nitrophenyl-beta-D-xyloside. Incubation of the SV3T3 cells with this beta-xyloside resulted in: (a) a 4- to 5-fold reduction in the molecular weight distribution of medium heparan sulfate, (b) a 10-fold increase in the total synthesis of medium heparan sulfate, and (c) a small reduction in cell growth. There was little, if any, change in either the total level of synthesis or the molecular weight distribution of cell surface heparan sulfate. The covalent association of the beta-xyloside to the medium heparan sulfate was demonstrated by an analysis of the medium heparan sulfate produced by cells grown in the presence of [35S]sulfate and the fluorogenic beta-xyloside, 4-methylumbelliferyl-beta-D-xyloside. Treatment of the purified radiolabeled and fluorogenic heparan sulfate with either nitrous acid or heparitinase resulted in a decrease in the molecular weight of both radiolabeled and fluorogenic material. The data presented in this paper are discussed with respect to both the structure of heparan sulfate and the putative role of heparan sulfate in cell social behavior.  相似文献   

8.
The physiological function of heparan sulfate chains in the mouse embryonic submandibular gland was studied by the use of heparitinases purified from Flavobacteriu heparinum . Heparitinase I, which catalyzes the cleavage of specific glycosaminidic linkages adjacent to non-or monosulfated disaccharides of heparan sulfate chains, in the culture medium of the mid and late 12-day gland inhibited the branch-initiation and changed their round epithelial shape to elongated one, together with a concommitant reduction in lobular growth. [3H]Thymidine incorporation experiments indicated that heparitinase I treatment blocked 24% of the DNA synthesis compared with controls. Analysis of 35S-inorganic sulfate labeled glycosaminoglycans extracted from cultured rudiments revealed that the glands with heparitinase I contained no heparan sulfate, while in the glands without the enzyme more than 20% of total glycosaminoglycans was heparan sulfate.
The heparitinase effect on morphogenesis was mimicked by the addition of heparan sulfate (1 mg ml−1) or heparin (75 μg ml−1), but not by chondroitin sulfate (1 mg ml−1) in the culture medium. Transmission electron microscopic study indicated that at the epithelial-mesenchymal interface close contacts between the fibroblast and epithelial cells were much fewer in heparitinase-treated glands than in controls. Immunohistochemical analysis demonstrated that the core protein of basement membrane heparan sulfate proteoglycan and type IV collagen accumulated abnormally inside the epithelial lobules of glands cultured with heparitinase I. These results strongly suggested that glycosaminoglycan chains of heparan sulfate or heparin is involved in the epithelial morphogenesis of the mouse embryonic submandibular gland.  相似文献   

9.
The cell surface heparan sulfate produced by primary cultures of 12-day mouse embryo cells has been found to consist of at least two forms, designated I and II. These two forms can be distinguished by both ion-exchange chromatography on DEAE-cellulose and eletrophoresis at pH 1. However, no difference in molecular weight is observed when the two forms are compared by gel filtration on Bio-Gel A-15m. These data suggest that the two forms differ in their content of sulfate residues. Multiple types of cell surface heparan sulfate are also produced by primary cell cultures derived from various mouse embryonic organs, including heart, lung, kidney and liver. Type II, the minor form produced by the primary embryonic mouse cells, behaves on ion-exchange chromatography and electrophoresis at pH 1 as the heparan sulfate produced by several mouse cell lines that exhibit contact inhibition of growth. The predominant form, type I, behaves on ion-exchange chromatography as the heparan sulfate derived from either DNA or RNA virus-transformed cell lines which lack growth control. The cell surface heparan sulfate produced by chick myoblasts, human fibroblasts, and bovine endothelial cells behave as single types on ion-exchange chromatography. These data suggest that an individual cell type produces a single type of cell surface heparan sulfate and provide support for a model in which cell-cell interactions are mediated, in part, by the quantity and, possibly, arrangement of sulfate residues within the heparan sulfate polymer.  相似文献   

10.
Cytoadherence is an important step for the invasion of a mammalian host cell by Trypanosoma cruzi. Cell surface macromolecules are implicated in the T. cruzi-cardiomyocyte recognition process. Therefore, we investigated the role of cell surface proteoglycans during this invasion process and analyzed their expression after the parasite infected the target cells. Treatment of trypomastigote forms of T. cruzi with soluble heparan sulfate resulted in a significant inhibition in successful invasion, while chondroitin sulfate had no effect. Removal of sulfated glycoconjugates from the cardiomyocyte surface using glycosaminoglycan (GAG) lyases demonstrated the specific binding of the parasites to heparan sulfate proteoglycans. Infection levels were reduced by 42% whenthe host cells were previously treated with heparitinase II. No changes were detected in the expression of GAGs infected cardiomyocytes even after 96 h of infection. Our data demonstrate that heparan sulfate proteoglycans, but not chondroitin sulfate, mediate both attachment and invasion of cardiomyocytes by T. cruzi.  相似文献   

11.
Human heparanase. Purification, characterization, cloning, and expression.   总被引:30,自引:0,他引:30  
Heparan sulfate and heparan sulfate proteoglycans are present in the extracellular matrix as well as on the external cell surface. They bind various molecules such as growth factors and cytokines and modulate the biological functions of binding proteins. Heparan sulfate proteoglycans are also important structural components of the basement membrane. Heparanase is an endo-beta-D-glucuronidase capable of cleaving heparan sulfate and has been implicated in inflammation and tumor angiogenesis and metastasis. In this study, we report the purification of a human heparanase from an SV40-transformed embryonic fibroblast cell line WI38/VA13 by four sequential column chromatographies. The activity was measured by high speed gel permeation chromatography of the degradation products of fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled heparan sulfate. The enzyme was purified to homogeneity, yielding a peptide with an apparent molecular mass of 50 kDa when analyzed by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Using the amino acid sequences of the N-terminal and internal heparanase peptides, a cDNA coding for human heparanase was cloned. NIH3T3 and COS-7 cells stably transfected with pBK-CMV expression vectors containing the heparanase cDNA showed high heparanase activities. The homology search revealed that no homologous protein had been reported.  相似文献   

12.
Fibroblast growth factor 2 (FGF2)-initiated FGF receptor (FGFR)-signaling requires the assistance of heparin/heparan sulfate. Here, we evaluated the effects of different heparan sulfate proteoglycan (HSPG)-expressing cell lines and HSPGs derived from these cells on FGF2-induced FGFR1-phosphorylation in heparan sulfate-negative BaF3 cells. HSPGs supplied in membrane-associated form, by presenting cells, were all effective promotors of FGF2-initiated FGFR1 phosphorylation, independently of their nature (syndecan/glypican) or cellular origin (human lung fibroblasts, transfected Namalwa cells, or transfected K562 cells). A treatment with heparitinase initially stimulated, but finally completely inhibited, the activity of these presenting cells. In comparison, equivalent amounts of soluble HSPGs, obtained by trypsinization of these cells or by immunopurification from cell extracts, did not promote FGF2-induced FGFR1-phosphorylation, yet removal of the less anionic species or a further treatment with heparitinase converted these soluble fractions into potent activators of FGF2/FGFR1 signaling. Extrapolating from current structural models, we suggest that FGFR dimerization and autophosphorylation is supported by cooperative "heparin-like end structures," and that cell surface association and concentration compensate for the relative scarcity of such end structures in native HSPGs. In this model, "proteolytic" shedding of heparan sulfate would act as a diluting, down-regulatory mechanism, while "heparanolytic" shedding might act as an up-regulatory mechanism, by increasing the concentration of these end structures.  相似文献   

13.
We examined the ability of Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cell mutants defective in glycosaminoglycan synthesis to metabolize 125I-labeled thrombospondin (TSP). Wild type CHO cells bound and degraded 125I-TSP with kinetics similar to those reported for endothelial cells. Both binding and degradation were saturable (half-saturation at 20 micrograms/ml). When the concentration of labeled TSP was 1-5 micrograms/ml, mutant 745, defective in xylosyltransferase, and mutant 761, defective in galactosyltransferase I, bound and degraded 6- to 16-fold less TSP than wild type; mutant 803, which specifically lacks heparan sulfate chains, bound and degraded 5-fold less TSP than wild type; and mutant 677, which lacks heparan sulfate and has increased levels of chondroitin sulfate, bound and degraded 2-fold less TSP than wild type. Binding and degradation of TSP by the mutants were not saturable at TSP concentrations up to 100 micrograms/ml. Bound TSP was localized by immunofluorescence to punctate structures on wild type and, to a lesser extent, 677 cells. Heparitinase pretreatment of wild type cells caused a 2- to 3-fold decrease in binding and degradation, whereas chondroitinase pretreatment had no effect. Chondroitinase pretreatment of the 677 mutant (deficient heparan sulfate and excess chondroitin sulfate) caused a 2-fold decrease in binding and an 8-fold decrease in turnover, whereas heparitinase pretreatment had no effect. Treatment of wild type cells with both heparitinase and chondroitinase resulted in a 6- to 8-fold decrease in binding and turnover. These results indicate that cell surface proteoglycans mediate metabolism of TSP by CHO cells and that the primary effectors of TSP metabolism are heparan sulfate proteoglycans.  相似文献   

14.
Incubation of a rat liver lysosomal fraction with [35S]heparan sulfate resulted in degradation of the polymer to oligosaccharides, demonstrating the presence of a heparan sulfate-degrading endoglycosidase. Judging from the size of the oligosaccharides, representing degradation end-products, only a limited number of the glycosidic linkages in the heparan sulfate molecule would seem to be susceptible to the heparitinase.The pH-dependence of the enzyme (active at pH 5.6; inactive at pH 3.8) was found to differ from that of liver hyaluronidase (active at pH 3.8; inactive at pH 5.6), suggesting that the heparitinase is a previously unknown enzyme.  相似文献   

15.
The present study provides direct evidence that syndecan 2 participates selectively in the induction of stress fiber formation in cooperation with integrin alpha5beta1 through specific binding of its heparan sulfate side chains to the fibronectin substrate. Our previous study with Lewis lung carcinoma-derived P29 cells demonstrated that the cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycan, which binds to fibronectin, is syndecan 2 (N. Itano et al., 1996, Biochem. J. 315, 925-930). We here report that in vitro treatment of the cells by antisense oligonucleotide for syndecan 2 resulted in a failure to form stress fibers on fibronectin substrate in association with specific suppression of its cell surface expression. Instead, localization of actin filaments in the cytoplasmic cortex occurred. A similar response of the cells was observed when the cells were treated to eliminate functions of cell surface heparan sulfates, including exogenous addition of heparin and pretreatment with anti-heparan sulfate antibody, F58-10E4, and with proteinase-free heparitinase I. Size- and structure-defined oligosaccharides prepared from heparin and chemically modified heparins were utilized as competitive inhibitors to examine the structural characteristics of the cell surface heparan sulfates involved in organization of the actin cytoskeleton. Their affinity chromatography on a column linked with a recombinant H-271 peptide containing a C-terminal heparin-binding domain of fibronectin demonstrated that 2-O-sulfated iduronates were essential for the binding. Inhibition studies revealed that a heparin-derived dodecasaccharide sample enriched with an IdoA(2OS)-GlcNS(6OS) disaccharide completely blocked binding of the syndecan 2 ectodomain to immobilized H-271 peptide. Finally, the dodecasaccharide sample was shown to inhibit stress fiber formation, triggered by adhesion of P29 cells to a CH-271 polypeptide consisting of both the RGD cell-binding and the C-terminal heparin-binding domains of fibronectin in a fused form. All these results consistently suggest that syndecan 2 proteoglycan interacts with the C-terminal heparin-binding domain of fibronectin at the highly sulfated cluster(s), such as [IdoA(2OS)-GlcNS(6OS)](6) present in its heparan sulfate chains, to result in the induction of stress fiber formation in cooperation with integrin alpha5beta1.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
《Analytical biochemistry》1985,148(2):479-484
Procedures employing the commercial preparation of heparitinase were developed for isolating a protein-enriched core molecule from proteoheparan sulfate by selective removal of the heparan sulfate chains. Treatment of proteoheparan sulfate with the enzyme preparation caused seriously extensive degradation owing to the presence of proteolytic activity in the enzyme preparation. This effect could be avoided by using a series of protease inhibitors which prevented proteolytic degradation with less significant effect on the heparitinase activity. Application of the procedures to a purified preparation from the Engelbreth-Holm-Swarm tumor yielded a single protein-enriched core fraction with a molecular weight of approximately 450,000, as ascertained by sodium dodceyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis.  相似文献   

18.
Material on the surface of activated T-cells was displaced following incubation with a sulfated polysaccharide, dextrin 2-sulfate (D2S), and purified by anion-exchange chromatography. This revealed a complex comprising histones H2A, H2B, H3, and H4 and DNA fragmented into 180-base pair units characteristic of mono-, di-, tri, and polynucleosomes, a pattern of fragmentation similar to that found in apoptotic cells. An antibody raised against the purified nucleosome preparation bound to the plasma membrane of activated T-cells confirming the surface location of nucleosomes. The interaction of sulfated polysaccharides with nucleosomes was investigated using a biotinylated derivative of D2S. It was found that sulfated polysaccharides bound to nucleosomes via the N termini of histones, especially H2A and H2B. Treatment of T-cells with either heparinase or heparitinase abolished nucleosome binding to plasma membranes. This suggests that nucleosomes are anchored to the surface of T-cells by heparan sulfate proteoglycans through an ionic interaction with the basic N-terminal residues in the histones. Furthermore, nucleosomes bound to the cell surface in this manner are then able to bind other sulfated polysaccharides, such as D2S, heparin, or dextran sulfate, through unoccupied histone N termini forming a complex comprising cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans, nucleosomes, and sulfated polysaccharides.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
We have isolated heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGs) from cloned rat microvascular endothelial cells using a combination of ion-exchange chromatography, affinity fractionation with antithrombin III (AT III), and gel filtration in denaturing solvents. The anticoagulantly active heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGact) which bind tightly to AT III bear mainly anticoagulantly active heparan sulfate (HSact) whereas the anticoagulantly inactive heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGinact) possess mainly anticoagulantly inactive heparan sulfate (HSinact). HSact and HSinact were also isolated by a combination of ion-exchange chromatography, treatment with protease and chondroitin ABC lyase, and affinity fractionation with AT III. HSact and HSinact have molecular sizes of about 25-30 kDa with the same overall composition of monosaccharides except that HSact exhibits about nine glucuronsyl 3-O-sulfated glucosamines/chain whereas HSinact possesses about three glucuronsyl 3-O-sulfated glucosamines/chain. Direct isolation of the AT III-binding site of HSact by exposing carbohydrate chains to Flavobacterium heparitinase in the presence of protease inhibitor revealed only a single interaction site which contained two to three glucuronsyl 3-O-sulfated glucosamine residues. The core proteins of HSPGact and HSPGinact were isolated by treatment with Flavobacterium heparitinase and purification by ion-exchange chromatography. The molecular sizes of the core proteins were established by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and their primary structures were examined by cleavage with trypsin or endopeptidase Glu-C as well as separation of peptides by reverse-phase high performance liquid chromatography. The results showed that both sets of core proteins exhibited three major components with molecular sizes of 50, 30, and 25 kDa, respectively. The 25-kDa species appears to be a proteolytic degradation product of the 30-kDa species. The peptide mapping revealed that HSPGact and HSPGinact possess extremely similar core proteins.  相似文献   

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