1. Heparin and heparan sulfate: analyzing structure and microheterogeneity.
- Author
-
Shriver Z, Capila I, Venkataraman G, and Sasisekharan R
- Subjects
- Heparin biosynthesis, Heparin isolation & purification, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Molecular Structure, Structure-Activity Relationship, Heparin chemistry, Heparitin Sulfate chemistry
- Abstract
The structural microheterogeneity of heparin and heparan sulfate is one of the major reasons for the multifunctionality exhibited by this class of molecules. In a physiological context, these molecules primarily exert their effects extracellularly by mediating key processes of cellular cross-talk and signaling leading to the modulation of a number of different biological activities including development, cell proliferation, and inflammation. This structural diversity is biosynthetically imprinted in a nontemplate-driven manner and may also be dynamically remodeled as cellular function changes. Understanding the structural information encoded in these molecules forms the basis for attempting to understand the complex biology they mediate. This chapter provides an overview of the origin of the structural microheterogeneity observed in heparin and heparan sulfate, and the orthogonal analytical methodologies that are required to help decipher this information.
- Published
- 2012
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