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1.
A heparin-binding protein was isolated from bovine uteri and purified to homogeneity. This protein appears as a double band of approx. 78 kDa in SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis and has an isoelectric point of 5.2. The binding of heparin to this protein is saturable. No other glycosaminoglycan from mammalian tissue, such as hyaluronic acid, chondroitin sulphate, dermatan sulphate or keratan sulphate, binds to the 78 kDa protein. Dextran sulphate binds in a non-saturable fashion. Certain heparan sulphate polysaccharide structures are required for binding to the 78 kDa protein. Some proteoheparan sulphates, such as endothelial cell-surface proteoheparan sulphate, show only weak interaction with the 78 kDa protein in contrast with a basement-membrane proteoheparan sulphate from HR-9 cells. Antibodies against the 78 kDa protein inhibit binding of proteoheparan [35S]sulphate from basement membranes to smooth-muscle cells. Conventional antibodies, Fab fragments and some monoclonal antibodies, inhibit smooth-muscle cell proliferation in a similar range as that observed for heparin. The protein was detected in a variety of tissues and cells but not in blood cells. A possible role of this protein as a receptor for heparin or heparan sulphate and its function in the control of the arterial wall structure are discussed.  相似文献   

2.
Proteoglycans from human umbilical vein endothelial cells   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Human umbilical vein endothelial cells were incubated with [35S]sulphate and investigated for their proteoglycan production. By gel chromatography, ion-exchange chromatography and CsCl density-gradient centrifugation we obtained preparative amounts of the endothelial proteoheparan sulphate HSI and of proteochondroitin sulphate from the conditioned medium of mass-cultured human umbilical vein endothelial cells. Approximately 90% of the 35S-labeled material in the endothelial cell conditioned medium was proteochondroitin sulphate. This molecule, with a molecular mass of 180-200 kDa, contains four side-chains of 35-40 kDa and a core protein of 35-40 kDa. Two proteoheparan sulphate forms (HSI and HSII) from the conditioned medium were distinguished by molecular mass and transport kinetics from the cell layer to the medium in pulse-chase experiments. One major form (HSI), with an approximate molecular mass of 160-200 kDa a core protein of 55-60 kDa and three to four polysaccharide side-chains of 35 kDa each, was found enriched in the cellular membrane pellet. Another proteoheparan sulphate (HSII), with polysaccharide moieties of 20 kDa, is enriched in the subendothelial matrix (substratum).  相似文献   

3.
Cultured arterial smooth muscle cells synthesize two proteoheparan sulfate species. One is found associated with the cells, whereas the other is excreted into the medium. The two proteoheparan sulfates have similar hydrodynamic sizes but differ in the Mr of their core proteins. The cell-associated proteoheparan sulfate has a Mr of 92,000 while that of soluble proteoheparan sulfate is 38,000. The cell-associated and the soluble proteoheparan sulfate species differ in their ability to suppress the proliferation of smooth muscle cells. When added to the culture medium 2-5 micrograms/ml of the cell-associated and 20-25 micrograms/ml of the soluble proteoheparan sulfate species inhibit the growth of smooth muscle cells half maximally. The antiproliferative potency of both species resides in the heparan sulfate chains. Commercially available heparin has no antiproliferative effect and is not able to prevent the antiproliferative action of cellular heparan sulfate. In contrast to heparin, none of the heparan sulfate preparations has anticoagulant activity. Smooth muscle cells endocytose the soluble heparan sulfate at a rate three to four times higher than that of the cell-associated heparan sulfate. The data suggest that the cell-associated and the soluble proteoheparan sulfate species are separate and possibly genetically distinct molecules. Furthermore, the structural determinants for antiproliferative activity and the recognition sites for endocytotic uptake appear to be different.  相似文献   

4.
Heparan sulphate proteoglycan was solubilized from human glomerular basement membranes by guanidine extraction and purified by ion-exchange chromatography and gel filtration. The yield of proteoglycan was approx. 2 mg/g of basement membrane. The glycoconjugate had an apparent molecular mass of 200-400 kDa and consisted of about 75% protein and 25% heparan sulphate. The amino acid composition was characterized by a high content of glycine, proline, alanine and glutamic acid. Hydrolysis with trifluoromethanesulphonic acid yielded core proteins of 160 and 110 kDa (and minor bands of 90 and 60 kDa). Alkaline NaBH4 treatment of the proteoglycan released heparan sulphate chains with an average molecular mass of 18 kDa. HNO2 oxidation of these chains yielded oligosaccharides of about 5 kDa, whereas heparitinase digestion resulted in a more complete degradation. The data suggest a clustering of N-sulphate groups in the peripheral regions of the glycosaminoglycan chains. A polyclonal antiserum raised against the intact proteoglycan showed reactivity against the core protein. It stained all basement membranes in an intense linear fashion in immunohistochemical studies on frozen kidney sections from man and various mammalian species.  相似文献   

5.
Radiolabelled proteoheparan sulphates were isolated from confluent monolayers of fibroblasts and from their spent media. The cell-surface-associated proteoglycan (Mr 350 000) has a core protein of Mr 180 000 that is cleaved by reduction of disulphide bonds into polypeptides of Mr 90 000, both of which can bind transferrin [Fransson, Carlstedt, Cöster & Malmström (1984) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 81, 5657-5661]. Thrombin digestion of the proteoglycan yielded two major fragments. The larger one contained the heparan sulphate chains and glycoprotein-type oligosaccharides, whereas the smaller one contained interchain disulphide bond(s) and had affinity for transferrin as well as for octyl-Sepharose. The larger thrombic fragment was cleaved by trypsin into fragments containing the heparan sulphate chains and the oligosaccharides respectively. The smaller proteoheparan sulphate derived from the culture medium (Mr 150 000) had a core protein of Mr 30 000, which contained heparan sulphate-attachment and oligosaccharide-attachment regions, but no domains for binding of transferrin or for hydrophobic interactions.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
Proteoglycans, metabolically labelled with [3H]leucine and 35SO4(2-), were isolated from the spent media and from guanidinium chloride extracts of cultured human umbilical-vein endothelial cells by using isopycnic density-gradient centrifugation, gel filtration and ion-exchange h.p.l.c. The major proteoglycan species were subjected to SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis before and after enzymic degradation of the polysaccharide chains. The cell extract contained mainly a heparan sulphate proteoglycan that has a buoyant density of 1.31 g/ml and a protein core with apparent molecular mass 300 kDa. The latter was heterogeneous and migrated as one major and one minor band. After reduction, the apparent molecular mass of the major band increased to approx. 350 kDa, indicating the presence of intrachain disulphide bonds. The proteoglycan binds to octyl-Sepharose and its polysaccharide chains are extensively degraded by heparan sulphate lyase. The proteoglycans of the medium contained 90% of all the incorporated 35SO4(2-). Here the predominant heparan sulphate proteoglycan was similar to that of the cell extract, but was more heterogeneous and contained an additional core protein with apparent molecular mass 210 kDa. Furthermore, two different chondroitin sulphate proteoglycans were found: one 200 kDa species with a high buoyant density (approx. 1.45 g/ml) and one 100 kDa species with low buoyant density (approx. 1.3 g/ml). Both these proteoglycans have a core protein of molecular mass approx. 47 kDa.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
The mouse teratocarcinoma-derived cell line, PYS-2, has been shown to produce laminin, a basement membrane-specific glycoprotein. In these studies we demonstrate that PYS-2 cells synthesize and secrete into the culture medium a proteoglycan which contains only heparan sulfate as its sulfated polysaccharide side chains, as well as type IV procollagen and laminin. The apparent molecular weights of the proteoglycan and its heparan sulfate side chain were estimated to be 400,000 and 25,000, respectively, by gel chromatography. A proteoheparan sulfate with properties closely similar, if not identical, to those of the proteoglycan in the medium, together with two heparan sulfate single chains of different molecular size, were extracted from the cell layer with 2% SDS in the presence of protease inhibitors. Ultrastructurally, a fine fibrillar intercellular matrix was recognized which contained discrete 100-200 A diameter ruthenium red-positive granules interspersed throughout the filamentous meshwork. The PYS-2 cultures were shown by immunofluorescence to react with antibodies against the heparan sulfate-containing proteoglycan isolated from the mouse EHS sarcoma (Hassell, J. R., P. G. Robey, H. J. Barrach, J. Wilczek, S. I. Rennard, and G. R. Martin. 1980. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 77:4494-4498). Immunoelectron microscopic examination, using the same antibodies, revealed that the proteoheparan sulfate was located not only at the edges but also within the interstices of the matrix. These findings indicate that PYS-2 cells synthesize and secrete a proteoglycan with properties similar to those of basement membrane proteoglycan. These cells may therefore serve as a useful model system for the study of the biosynthesis and structure of basement membranes.  相似文献   

10.
Inhibition of protein synthesis by cycloheximide 10(-3)M reduced the incorporation of [35S]sulphate into heparan sulphate to about 5% of untreated hepatocytes. Addition of rho-nitrophenyl beta-D-xyloside could partially revert this inhibitory effect. The sulphated material isolated from the cell layer or secretions of hepatocytes grown in presence of cycloheximide and rho-nitrophenyl beta-D-xyloside were shown to be mostly free heparan sulphate chains not bound to core protein. Covalent association of beta-xylosides to the heparan sulphates was demonstrated for heparan sulphate synthetized in the presence of [35S]sulphate, cycloheximide and the fluorogenic 4-methylumbelliferyl beta-D-xyloside. Beta-Xylosides served as an initiator of heparan sulphate chain synthesis in rat hepatocytes only in the absence of protein synthesis. Heparan sulphates primed on artificial beta-xylosides are slightly smaller in molecular size and are more sulphated than chains linked to core protein.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
1. Heparan sulphates from normal 3T3 fibroblasts are association-prone as indicated by their affinity for agarose gels substituted with cognate heparan sulphate species. Heparan sulphates from SV40-transformed or polyoma-virus-transformed cells have no affinity for the same gels. 2. Heparan sulphates from the medium, the pericellular and intracellular pools of normal, SV40-transformed and polyoma-transformed 3T3 cells were separated into four subfractions (HS1–HS4) by ion-exchange chromatography. In general, HS1–HS3 were found in cell-derived heparan sulphates, whereas HS3–HS4 were present in the medium. The heparan sulphates from transformed cells were more heterogeneous and of lower charge density than those from the normal counterpart. 3. Degradations via periodate oxidation/alkaline elimination yielded the oligomers glucosamine-(hexuronate–glucosamine)n-R with n=1–5 and a large proportion of N-sulphate groups. There was a large contribution of fragments n=4–5 from heparan sulphates of normal cells. These fragments were less common in low-sulphated heparan sulphates of transformed cells. In the case of medium-drived heparan sulphates all species had a low content of fragments n=4–5. 4. The size distribution of (glucuronate–N-acetylglucosamine)n regions was assessed after deaminative cleavage. It was broad and ranged from n=1–10 for all heparan sulphate species. In the case of medium-derived heparan sulphates there were distinct differences between normal and transformed cells. In the latter chains the N-acetyl-rich segments were both shorter and longer than in the normal case. The shape of the disaccharide peak was consistent with a lower content of O-sulphate in the heparan sulphates from transformed cells. 5. It was concluded that heparan sulphates from medium or transformed cells exhibit the greatest structural deviation from the normal case. The finding of lower proportions of extended, iduronate/glucuronate-bearing, N-sulphate-rich segments in heparan sulphates of transformed cells was particularly interesting in view of the fact that these elements have been associated with ability to self-interact.  相似文献   

13.
Summary This study describes the distribution of heparan sulfate proteoglycan (HSPG) within the rat aorta using immunocytochemical (biotin-avidin-peroxidase) and immunoelectron microscopy (125I-autoradiography). Heparan sulfate proteoglycan was isolated from a basement membrane producing mouse EHS sarcoma (Hassell et al. 1980) and used to generate antisera in rabbits. Light microscopic observations revealed intense immunostaining of the intima and media of normal aorta, adventitial vasa vasorum, and aortic intimal fibromuscular thickenings induced by experimental injury (balloon de-endothelialization). Immunoelectron microscopy using 125I labeled antibodies to HSPG revealed that proteoheparan sulfate was localized to the amorphous layer of basement membrane below aortic and capillary endothelium. In addition, labeled anti-HSPG could be localized to the external lamina surrounding the smooth muscle cells in the hyperplastic intima. These studies reveal that antibodies prepared against a proteoheparan sulfate isolated from a basement membrane producting EHS sarcoma cross react with basement membrane structures within the aortic wall. Furthermore, these results demonstrate that the basement membranes beneath aortic and capillary endothelium and the external lamina surrounding aortic smooth muscle cells contain a heparan sulfate proteoglycan that is antigenically similar.  相似文献   

14.
Localization of proteoheparan sulfate in rat aorta   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
This study describes the distribution of heparan sulfate proteoglycan ( HSPG ) within the rat aorta using immunocytochemical (biotin-avidin-peroxidase) and immuno-electron microscopy (125I-autoradiography). Heparan sulfate proteoglycan was isolated from a basement membrane producing mouse EHS sarcoma ( Hassell et al. 1980) and used to generate antisera in rabbits. Light microscopic observations revealed intense immunostaining of the intima and media of normal aorta, adventitial vasa vasorum, and aortic intimal fibromuscular thickenings induced by experimental injury (balloon de-endothelialization). Immunoelectron microscopy using 125I labeled antibodies to HSPG revealed that proteoheparan sulfate was localized to the amorphous layer of basement membrane below aortic and capillary endothelium. In addition, labeled anti- HSPG could be localized to the external lamina surrounding the smooth muscle cells in the hyperplastic intima. These studies reveal that antibodies prepared against a proteoheparan sulfate isolated from a basement membrane producing EHS sarcoma cross react with basement membrane structures within the aortic wall. Furthermore, these results demonstrate that the basement membranes beneath aortic and capillary endothelium and the external lamina surrounding aortic smooth muscle cells contain a heparan sulfate proteoglycan that is antigenically similar.  相似文献   

15.
Rabbit lens epithelial cells synthesize and secrete a variety of [35S]sulphate-labeled glycoconjugates in vitro. Associated with the cell layer, and with the medium, was a high molecular weight glycoconjugate(s) that contained heparan sulphate which was apparently covalently linked to sulphated glycoprotein. This component(s) was eluted in the void volume of a Sepharose CL-2B column and could not be fractionated by detergent treatment or extraction with lipid solvents. The cell layer also contained glycosaminoglycans (72% heparan sulphate, 28% chondroitin sulphate), as well as a small proportion of a low molecular weight sulphated glycoprotein. The major 35S-labeled species secreted into the medium were sulphated glycoproteins with approximate molecular weights of 120,000 and 35,000 together with a heparan sulphate proteoglycan. This proteoglycan could be precipitated from the culture medium with 30% saturated (NH4)2SO4 and eluted from Sepharose CL-4B columns at approximately the same position (Kav = 0.15) as heparan sulphate proteoglycans described in the basement membrane of the EHS "sarcoma" (Hassell, J. R., P. G. Robey, H. J. Barrach, J. Wilczek, S. I. Rennard, and G. R. Martin, 1980, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 77:4494-4498) and of the mouse mammary epithelium (David, G., and M. Bernfield, 1981, J. Cell Biol., 91:281-286). Its presence in the culture medium was unanticipated but may be explained by the inability of these cultures to deposit a basement membrane when grown on a plastic surface. The relationship of this heparan sulphate proteoglycan to the lens epithelial basement membrane is the subject of the following paper.  相似文献   

16.
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 0.3890, 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   

17.
Cell-associated proteoheparan sulfate has been isolated from bovine arterial smooth muscle cells preincubated with [35S]sulfate or a combination of [3H]glucosamine and [35S]methionine. The purified proteoheparan sulfate had an apparent Mr of 200,000 on calibrated Sepharose CL-2B columns. The glycosaminoglycan component (Mr approximately 30,000) was identified as heparan sulfate by its susceptibility to specific enzymatic and chemical degradation. After degradation of the proteoheparan sulfate by microbial heparitinase the resulting protein core had an apparent Mr of 92,000 on SDS-polyacrylamide gels. Its mobility was similar in the absence and presence of reducing agents indicating that the protein core consists of a single polypeptide chain. Pulse-chase experiments revealed that about 40% of the cell layer-associated proteoheparan sulfate was released into the medium, while the remainder was internalized and converted to smaller species through a series of degradation steps. Initially there was a proteolytical cleavage of the protein core generating glycosaminoglycan peptide intermediates with polysaccharides chains similar in size to the original. The half-life of the native proteoheparan sulfate was found to be about 4 h.  相似文献   

18.
  • 1.1. The proteoglycan peak from anion exchange chromatography of an extract of bovine aorta was digested with chondroitinase ABC. The residual heparan sulphate proteoglycans were further purified by chromatography on Sepharose CL4B and DEAE-Sephacel to yield two species, of high and low charge density.
  • 2.2. Higher molecular weight material had a higher proportion of high charge density proteoglycan, while the lower molecular weight species had a higher proportion of low charge density heparan sulphate proteoglycan.
  • 3.3. The two species shared epitopes as they both reacted with an antibody to heparan sulphate proteoglycan from bovine glomerular basement membrane.
  • 4.4. On electron microscopy, both high and low charge density proteoglycans were visualized as ‘tadpole-like’ molecules, which showed a tendency to aggregate via their globular heads.
  • 5.5. Bovine aortic smooth muscle cells were cultured in the presence of [35S]sulphate and [3H]glucosamine. Proteoglycans were isolated from medium and cell layer extract by the methods outlined above.
  • 6.6. The major HSPG species isolated from medium were significantly larger than those from cell layer and displayed substantial heterogeneity in both size of HS chain after papain digestion and size of protein core after heparitinase digestion. 7. The major cell layer species yielded two HS species of widely differing mol. wt after papain digestion, and a very small protein core after heparitinase digestion. Therefore cell layer-associated HSPGs show a good deal more homogeneity than those found in the medium.
  • 7.8. Further ion-exchange chromatography after digestion with chondroitinase ABC revealed HSPG species of lower charge density, possibly derived from a hybrid chondroitin sulphate-dermatan sulphate proteoglycan (CS/DSPG) after removal of the CS/DS chains.
  相似文献   

19.
Confluent cultures of a human neuroblastoma cell line (CHP100) were incubated for 48 h with d-[1-3H]glucosamine and sodium [35S]sulphate. Radioactive glycosaminoglycans were analysed in the growth medium, rapid trypsin digest of the cell monolayer and a 1% (w/v) Triton/0.5 M NaOH extract of the final cell pellet. Sulphated glycosaminoglycans co-chromatographed when eluted by NaCL gradient from DEAE-cellulose. The medium contained mainly chondroitin sulphates, whereas the cell surface was enriched in heparan sulphate. Heparan sulphate was isolated as chondroitinase ABC-resistant material and treated with nitrous acid. Analysis of the scission products on Bio-Gel P-10 yielded fragments varying in size from single disaccharides to glycans consisting of nine disaccharide units. Cell-surface and medium heparan sulphate had respectively 52% and 54% N-sulphated glucosamine residues distributed in similar patterns along the polymer chain. The N:O-sulphate ratio of neuroblastoma heparan sulphate was 1.1:1. Analysis by high-voltage electrophoresis of di- and tetrasaccharide products produced by nitrous acid treatment showed that the distribution of ‘O’-sulphate groups differed strikingly between heparan sulphates from the medium and cell-surface compartments. A di-O-sulphated tetrasaccharide was identified in both heparan sulphate species. The absence of detectable amounts of 35[S]sulphate associated with fragments larger than tetrasaccharide supports the close topographical association of N-sulphate and O-sulphate groups.  相似文献   

20.
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