MUCOPOLYSACCHARIDES SYNTHESIZED BY CULTURED GLIAL CELLS DERIVED FROM A PATIENT WITH SANFILIPPO A SYNDROME |
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Authors: | A. L. Fluharty Marsha L. Davis J. L. Trammell R. L. Stevens H. Kihara |
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Affiliation: | University of California, Los Angeles, The Neuropsychiatric Institute-Pacific State Hospital Research Program, Pomona, CA 91768, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | —Glial cells were cultured from brain tissue obtained at autopsy of a patient with Sanfilippo A syndrome. Mucopolysaccharides were labeled by culturing the cells in the presence of [35S]sulfate. After proteolysis, intracellular and media-elaborated mucopolysaccharides were fractionated by Dowex 1 chromatography. One fraction, identified as heparan sulfate by chromatographic, electrophoretic, and enzyme susceptibility properties, accumulated in Sanfilippo glial cells in greater amounts than in controls. Heparan sulfate was also excreted into the culture media by both Sanfilippo and normal cultures, and it constituted a major fraction of the sulfated mucopolysaccharides synthesized by glial cells. Sanfilippo and normal fibroblasts were also included in these studies for comparative purposes. Sanfilippo fibroblasts accumulated significantly increased amounts of heparan sulfate as compared to normal fibroblasts. Heparan sulfate was excreted into the culture media by Sanfilippo and normal fibroblasts in equivalent amounts, but in contrast to glial cells, it was only a minor component of the sulfated mucopolysaccharides produced. Cultured glial cells should provide a useful system for investigating the role of heparan sulfate in glial cell function. |
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