1. Academic Validation
  2. Heparin is essential for the storage of specific granule proteases in mast cells

Heparin is essential for the storage of specific granule proteases in mast cells

  • Nature. 1999 Aug 19;400(6746):769-72. doi: 10.1038/23481.
D E Humphries 1 G W Wong D S Friend M F Gurish W T Qiu C Huang A H Sharpe R L Stevens
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Medicine, Boston University School of Medicine, and VA Medical Center, Massachusetts 02130, USA. Humphries.Donald_E@BOSTON.VA.GOV
PMID: 10466726 DOI: 10.1038/23481
Abstract

All mammals produce heparin, a negatively charged glycosaminoglycan that is a major constituent of the secretory granules of mast cells which are found in the peritoneal cavity and most connective tissues. Although heparin is one of the most studied molecules in the body, its physiological function has yet to be determined. Here we describe transgenic mice, generated by disrupting the N-deacetylase/N-sulphotransferase-2 gene, that cannot express fully sulphated heparin. The mast cells in the skeletal muscle that normally contain heparin lacked metachromatic granules and failed to store appreciable amounts of mouse mast-cell Protease (mMCP)-4, mMCP-5 and Carboxypeptidase A (mMC-CPA), even though they contained substantial amounts of mMCP-7. We developed mast cells from the bone marrow of the transgenic mice. Although these cultured cells contained high levels of various Protease transcripts and had substantial amounts of mMCP-6 protein in their granules, they also failed to express mMCP-5 and mMC-CPA. Our data show that heparin controls, through a post-translational mechanism, the levels of specific cassettes of positively charged proteases inside mast cells.

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