Literature DB >> 12374790

Location of N-unsubstituted glucosamine residues in heparan sulfate.

Camilla Westling1, Ulf Lindahl.   

Abstract

Functional properties of heparan sulfate (HS) are generally ascribed to the sulfation pattern of the polysaccharide. However, recently reported functional implications of rare N-unsubstituted glucosamine (GlcNH(2)) residues in native HS prompted our structural characterization of sequences around such residues. HS preparations were cleaved with nitrous acid at either N-sulfated or N-unsubstituted glucosamine units followed by reduction with NaB(3)H(4). The labeled products were characterized following complementary deamination steps. The proportion of GlcNH(2) units varied from 0.7-4% of total glucosamine in different HS preparations. The GlcNH(2) units occurred largely clustered at the polysaccharide-protein linkage region in intestinal HS, also more peripherally in aortic HS. They were preferentially located within N-acetylated domains, or in transition sequences between N-acetylated and N-sulfated domains, only 20-30% of the adjacent upstream and downstream disaccharide units being N-sulfated. The nearest downstream (toward the polysaccharide-protein linkage) hexuronic acid was invariably GlcUA, whereas the upstream neighbor could be either GlcUA or IdoUA. The highly sulfated but N-unsubstituted disaccharide unit, -IdoUA2S-GlcNH(2)6S-, was detected in human renal and porcine intestinal HS, but not in HS from human aorta. These results are interpreted in terms of a biosynthetic mechanism, whereby GlcNH(2) residues are formed through regulated, incomplete action of an N-deacetylase/N-sulfotransferase enzyme.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12374790     DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M209139200

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biol Chem        ISSN: 0021-9258            Impact factor:   5.157


  21 in total

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9.  Evolutionary differences in glycosaminoglycan fine structure detected by quantitative glycan reductive isotope labeling.

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10.  Synthesis of heparan sulfate with cyclophilin B-binding properties is determined by cell type-specific expression of sulfotransferases.

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Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2009-11-23       Impact factor: 5.157

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