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Comparative Study
. 1996 May;46(5):472-7.

Characterization of sulfation patterns of beef and pig mucosal heparins by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy

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  • PMID: 8737629
Comparative Study

Characterization of sulfation patterns of beef and pig mucosal heparins by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy

B Casu et al. Arzneimittelforschung. 1996 May.

Abstract

Though differing only slightly in their degrees of sulfation, heparin preparations from pig mucosa and those from beef mucosa have consistently different 13C- and 1H-NMR spectra, which provide useful fingerprints for distinguishing the two types of heparin. Integrated areas of NMR signals associated with minor, undersulfated sequences (assigned by comparison with mono-dimensional spectra of selectively desulfated heparins and by analysis of two-dimensional spectra of heparins prepared from pig and beef mucosa) permit quantitation of differences in sulfation patterns. Undersulfation of pig mucosal heparins at position 6 of the hexosamine units, determined by 13C-NMR and expressed as percent glucosamines nonsulfated at C6 referred to total glucosamines, is substantially lower for pig mucosal heparins than for beef mucosal heparins (16.9-21.7% vs 36.7-40.7%; average values: 18.6% vs 40.3%). By contrast, undersulfation at position 2 of the iduronic acid units, determined by 1H-NMR and expressed as percent nonsulfated iduronic acid referred to total (sulfated + nonsulfated) iduronic acid is significantly higher for pig mucosal preparations (9.6-13.5% vs 2.1-2.7%; average values: 12.7% vs 2.3%). Pig mucosal heparins also have a significantly higher content of 3-O-sulfated glucosamine units, which are markers for the active site of heparin for antithrombin-III.

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