Anticoagulantly active heparin-like molecules from mast cell-deficient mice
- PMID: 3706560
- DOI: 10.1152/ajpheart.1986.250.5.H879
Anticoagulantly active heparin-like molecules from mast cell-deficient mice
Abstract
To assess the contribution of mast cells to the maintenance of blood fluidity, the hindlimb vasculature of mast cell-deficient mice (W/Wv) and littermates containing normal levels of mast cells (+/+), were perfused with purified human thrombin and antithrombin. Enzyme-inhibitor complex generation within the vasculature was enhanced to a comparable extent for W/Wv and +/+ mice over the uncatalyzed rate, that level of complex produced within a similar time interval in the absence of heparin. Perfusion of purified Flavobacterium heparinase prior to infusion of the hemostatic components, or perfusion of antithrombin modified at the heparin-binding domain, reduced W/Wv and +/+ hindlimb thrombin-antithrombin complex formation to the uncatalyzed rate. To further define the cellular source of the vascular-associated heparin-like molecules, endothelial cells isolated from epididymal fat pads of W/Wv and +/+ mice were grown in vitro. The acceleration of thrombin-antithrombin interactions in the presence of endothelial cell-derived glycosaminoglycans was similar for W/Wv and +/+ mice, was abolished with purified bacterial heparinase, and was expressed to only a minor extent when utilizing modified antithrombin. The biologically active mucopolysaccharides appear to be present on the cell surface.
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