Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8514292 | Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences | 2017 | 43 Pages |
Abstract
Heparin is a polysaccharide that is widely used as an anticoagulant drug. The mechanism for heparin's anticoagulant activity is primarily through its interaction with a serine protease inhibitor, antithrombin III (AT), that enhances its ability to inactivate blood coagulation serine proteases, including thrombin (factor IIa) and factor Xa. The AT-binding site in the heparin is one of the most well-studied carbohydrate-protein binding sites and its structure is the basis for the synthesis of the heparin pentasaccharide drug, fondaparinux. Despite our understanding of the structural requirements for the heparin pentasaccharide AT-binding site, there is a lack of data on the natural variability of these binding sites in heparins extracted from animal tissues. The present work provides a detailed study on the structural variants of the tetrasaccharide fragments of this binding site afforded following treatment of a heparin with heparin lyase II. The 5 most commonly observed tetrasaccharide fragments of the AT-binding site are fully characterized, and a method for their quantification in heparin and low-molecular-weight heparin products is described.
Keywords
NdstSAXCIDIdoASTSHSQCLMWHGlcAEDDTOCSYGlcNMS/MSantithrombin IIIiduronic aciduronic acidcollisionally induced dissociationTandem MSstrong anion exchangeNMRStructure-activity relationshipSulfotransferasesMass spectrometryNuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopyTotal correlation spectroscopyAnticoagulant activityHeparin lyaselow-molecular-weight heparinCOSYhigh-performance liquid chromatographyHPLCheteronuclear single quantum coherence
Related Topics
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Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutical Science
Drug Discovery
Authors
Yin Chen, Lei Lin, Isaac Agyekum, Xing Zhang, Kalib St. Ange, Yanlei Yu, Fuming Zhang, Jian Liu, I. Jonathan Amster, Robert J. Linhardt,