We have treated bovine lung heparan sulfate with alkaline [3H]borohydride to end label the chains with [3H]xylitol. After subsequent periodate oxidation-alkaline elimination products were separated by gel permeation and ion exchange chromatography. The linkage region fragment expected to have 2 galactoses and 1 [3H]xylitol residue appeared in the tetra-/trisaccharide region after gel filtration and was bound to the anion exchange resin. A similar negatively charged fragment, expected to have 2 galactoses, 1 xylose and 1 serine, was isolated after periodate oxidation-alkaline elimination of unlabeled heparan sulfate. The negative charge was due to the presence of alkaline phosphatase-labile phosphate ester. The molar ratio of galactose:phosphate:xylose was 2.17:1.19:1.00. The phosphate ester was associated with the xylose/[3H] xylitol moiety as indicated by the formation of phosphoxylose/-xylitol by beta-galactosidase digestion of the phosphorylated trisaccharide. Furthermore, orcinol reactivity disappeared after periodate oxidation of the dephosphorylated trisaccharide. The phosphate ester must be located to C-2 of xylose/xylitol as the 1-3H radioactivity could be released by periodate oxidation when it was preceded by alkaline phosphatase treatment. It is estimated that almost every chain of heparan sulfate carries 2-phosphoxylose. It would be of interest to know if glycosaminoglycan chains that are artificially initiated onto exogeneous beta-D-xylosides also acquire the 2-phosphoxylose moiety.
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