Heparin-protein interactions.

@article{Capila2002HeparinproteinI,
  title={Heparin-protein interactions.},
  author={Ishan Capila and Robert J. Linhardt},
  journal={Angewandte Chemie},
  year={2002},
  volume={41 3},
  pages={
          391-412
        }
}
Heparin, a sulfated polysaccharide belonging to the family of glycosaminoglycans, has numerous important biological activities, associated with its interaction with diverse proteins. Heparin is widely used as an anticoagulant drug based on its ability to accelerate the rate at which antithrombin inhibits serine proteases in the blood coagulation cascade. Heparin and the structurally related heparan sulfate are complex linear polymers comprised of a mixture of chains of different length, having… 
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TLDR
It is argued that the evidence supports both a level of redundancy and a degree of selectivity in the structure–activity relationship between HS and heparin.
Interactions of heparin/heparan sulfate with proteins: appraisal of structural factors and experimental approaches.
TLDR
Some relevant details of the structural characteristics of heparin/heparan sulfate and the approaches used to investigate their interactions with proteins are survey and a perspective of new and developing approaches, which may aid advances in this field are provided.
Heparin: role in protein purification and substitution with animal-component free material
TLDR
Alternatives for the provision of heparin such as chemical synthesized he parin, chemoenzymatic hepar in, and bioengineered heparins are discussed and the usage of other chromatographic systems mimetic the heparIn effect is reviewed.
Heparin-Binding Domains in Vascular Biology
Heparin is a major anticoagulant with activity mediated primarily through its interaction with antithrombin (AT). Heparan sulfate (HS), structurally related to heparin, binds a wide range of proteins
Heparin-derived heparan sulfate mimics to modulate heparan sulfate-protein interaction in inflammation and cancer.
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A method for the non-covalent immobilization of heparin to surfaces.
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The sulfated glycosaminoglycans, heparan sulfate and heparin, are increasingly implicated in cell-biological processes such as cytokine action, cell adhesion, and regulation of enzymic catalysis.
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TLDR
The dimerization of heparin-linked acidic FGF observed here is an elegant mechanism for the modulation of signalling through combinatorial homodimerization and heterodimerizing of the 12 known members of the FGF family.
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TLDR
It is suggested that the greater affinity of the guanidino cation for sulfate in GAGs is probably due to stronger hydrogen bonding and a more exothermic electrostatic interaction, which can be rationalized by soft acid, soft base concepts.
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TLDR
The substrate specificity and cleavage site of heparanase from human hepatoma and platelets were investigated and selective O-desulfation of the heparin octasaccharide implicated a 2-O-sulfate group on a hexuronic acid residue located two monosaccharides units from the cleavage sites, toward the reducing end.
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TLDR
This study provides the first definitive evidence that glycosaminoglycan heparin contains at least three populations of molecules with affinity for antithrombin III.
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TLDR
These protocols were used to predict the heparin binding site on Interleukin-8, a chemokine with a central role in the human immune response and indicate that His18, Lys20, Arg60, Lys64, and Arg68 in interleukIn-8 bind to heparIn.
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TLDR
The combination of site-directed mutagenesis and titrating calorimetry permitted an analysis of the energetic contributions of individual bF GF residues in the binding of heparin to bFGF, indicating that pure electrostatic interactions contribute only 30% of the binding free energy as analyzed by polyelectrolyte theory and that more specific nonionic interactions, such as hydrogen bonding and van der Waals packing, contribute the majority of the free energy for this binding reaction.
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