Hyaluronan (HA) hydrolysis catalysed by hyaluronidase (HAase) is strongly inhibited when performed at low HAase over HA concentration ratio and under low ionic strength conditions. The reason is the ability of long HA chains to form electrostatic and non-catalytic complexes with HAase. For a given HA concentration, low HAase concentrations lead to very low hydrolysis rates because all the HAase molecules are sequestered by HA, whilst high HAase concentrations lead to high hydrolysis rates because the excess of HAase molecules remains free and active.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHyaluronan (HA) hydrolysis catalyzed by hyaluronidase (HAase) is inhibited at low HAase over HA ratio and low ionic strength, because HA forms electrostatic complexes with HAase, which is unable to catalyze hydrolysis. Bovine serum albumin (BSA) was used as a model to study the HA-protein electrostatic complexes at pH 4. At low ionic strength, there is formation of (i) neutral insoluble complexes at the phase separation and (ii) small positively-charged or large negatively-charged soluble complexes whether BSA or HA is in excess.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHyaluronan (HA) has various biological functions that are strongly dependent on its chain length. In some cases, as in inflammation and angiogenesis, long and short chain-size HA effects are antagonistic. HA hydrolysis catalyzed by hyaluronidase (HAase) is believed to be involved in the control of the balance between longer and shorter HA chains.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHyaluronan (HA) is involved in wound healing and its biological properties depend on its molecular size. The effects of native HA and HA-12 and HA-880 saccharide fragments on human fibroblast proliferation and expression of matrix-related genes were studied. The three HA forms promoted cell adhesion and proliferation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHyaluronidase (HAase) plays an important role in the control of the size and concentration of hyaluronan (HA) chains, whose biological properties strongly depend on their length. Our previous studies of HA hydrolysis catalyzed by testicular HAase demonstrated that, whilst the substrate-dependence curve has a Michaelis-Menten shape with a 0.15 mol L(-1) ionic strength, at low ionic strength (5 mmol L(-1)), a strong decrease in the initial hydrolysis rate is observed at high substrate concentrations; the HA concentration for which the initial rate is maximum increases when the HAase concentration is increased.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHyaluronidase and high levels of hyaluronan are found together in tumours. It is highly likely that hyaluronidase activity controls the balance between high molecular mass hyaluronan and oligosaccharides, and thus plays an important role in cancer development. The hyaluronan hydrolysis catalysed by bovine testicular hyaluronidase was studied as a model.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHyaluronan (HA) has different biological functions according to its molar mass; short HA fragments are involved in inflammation processes and angiogenesis, whereas native HA is not. Physicochemically, studies of native HA hydrolysis catalyzed by bovine testicular hyaluronidase (HAase) have suggested that kinetic parameters depend on HA chain length. To study the influence of HA chain length in more detail, and to try to correlate the physicochemical and biological properties of HA, HA hydrolysis catalyzed by HAase was used in a new procedure to obtain HA fragments of different molar masses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSpecific hyaladherin-based assays have been set up to measure the concentration of hyaluronan in biological fluids. Hyaluronectin (HN; a hyaladherin extracted from ovine brain) binds to hyaluronan (HA) that must be 10 units (HA10) or more long. It was therefore of interest to determine whether HN would continue to bind to HA10 in full-length HA since conformational changes might mask potential binding sites.
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