Author:
Vannucchi S,Ruggiero M,Chiarugi V
Abstract
In a series of attempts to reveal plasma heparin, we found that high ionic strength and modification of protein amino groups were not effective in extracting endogenous heparin (or, indeed, a large percentage of exogenous labelled heparin), whereas delipidation in the presence of 4M-guanidinium chloride gave high yields, indicating that plasma heparin may be assembled with compounds other than proteins, in a form making it inaccessible to water and ions. During the extraction of lipids, a paradoxical entry of heparin into the organic phase was observed. Detergents, including sodium dodecyl sulphate, did not shift heparin into the aqueous phase, whereas repeated chloroform/methanol extraction did so. Using purified compounds we were able to reproduce in vitro both the scavenging of heparin from water as well as the formation of heparin-phosphatidylcholine complexes soluble in organic solvents. Evidence for complexing of heparin with phosphatidylcholine was also obtained by electrophoretic and ultracentrifugation assays. The quaternary-ammonium-containing phosphatidylcholine was the more effective phospholipid in binding heparin; anionic phospholipids did not bind. Only heparin-like glycosaminoglycans bound phosphatidylcholine, but less-sulphated compounds (heparan sulphate and dermatan sulphate) were weaker ligands. Gel-filtration experiments showed that heparin was not bound to liposome vesicles, but that a measurable percentage of the phospholipids was stripped off from vesicles and was found in the form of a complex separable from liposomes by gel filtration. The molecular basis as well as the biological role of the interaction of heparin with major membrane phospholipids are discussed.
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology,Biochemistry
Cited by
25 articles.
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