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Publication : Heparanase-mediated cleavage of macromolecular heparin accelerates release of granular components of mast cells from extracellular matrices.

First Author  Higashi N Year  2014
Journal  Biochem J Volume  458
Issue  2 Pages  291-9
PubMed ID  24344642 Mgi Jnum  J:210492
Mgi Id  MGI:5571252 Doi  10.1042/BJ20131463
Citation  Higashi N, et al. (2014) Heparanase-mediated cleavage of macromolecular heparin accelerates release of granular components of mast cells from extracellular matrices. Biochem J 458(2):291-9
abstractText  Heparanase cleaves macromolecular heparin in the secretory granules of connective tissue-type mast cells. We investigated roles of the cleavage under a microenvironment mimicking where the mast cells physiologically reside. A connective tissue-type mast cell line MST and mouse peritoneal cell-derived mast cells stored macromolecular heparin in the secretory granules. The cells expressing heparanase stored fragmented heparin (~10 kDa) due to heparanase-dependent cleavage of the heparin. We produced an artificial collagen-based extracellular matrix and placed the live cells or glycosaminoglycans purified from the cells in the matrix to measure the release of sulfated macromolecules into the medium. The sulfate-radiolabelled molecules from the degranulating heparanase-expressing cells and the purified glycosaminoglycans showed significantly greater release into the medium than those derived from mock cells, which was not the case in suspension culture. The mast cell granular enzyme chymase, but not beta-hexosaminidase, showed significantly greater release from the degranulating heparanase-expressing cells than from mock cells. Purified chymase mixed with fragmented heparin derived from heparanase-expressing cells showed greater release from collagen gels than the enzyme alone or mixed with macromolecular heparin derived from mock cells. We propose that the cleavage of macromolecular heparin by heparanase accelerates the release of heparin and chymase from extracellular matrices.
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