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Anticoagulantly active heparin-like molecules from vascular tissue

248

Citations

25

References

1984

Year

Abstract

Mucopolysaccharides were isolated from calf cerebral microvasculature and calf aorta. The only complex carbohydrates that exhibited anticoagulant activity were heparin-like components. The biologic potencies of calf cerebral and aortic heparin-like species were 2.92 units/mg of anti-factor Xa activity and 2.85 units/mg of anti-factor IIa activity, as well as 0.56 unit/mg of anti-factor Xa activity and 0.19 unit/mg of anti-factor IIa activity, respectively. Additional experiments revealed that the anticoagulantly active aortic components were significantly present only within the intima. The above populations of heparin-like species were affinity fractionated with antithrombin. The highly active component obtained from calf cerebral microvasculature exhibited an anti-factor Xa activity of 40.7 units/mg as well as an anti-factor IIa activity of 36.8 units/mg, constituted about 4.2% of the initial mass of the starting material, and represented about 75% of the biologic potency of the starting material. The highly active component derived from calf aorta exhibited an anti-factor Xa activity of 55.4 units/mg as well as an anti-factor IIa activity of 11.3 units/mg, constituted about 0.3% of the initial mass of the starting material, and represented about 60% of the biologic potency of the starting material. The highly active cerebral microvascular species possessed a molecular weight and charge density similar to that of heparan sulfate whereas the highly active aortic species displayed a molecular weight and charge density equivalent to that of a hexadecasaccharide fragment of heparin.

References

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