Abstract

The glycosaminoglycans of various basement membranes (human and bovine renal glomerular and tubular basement membranes as well as calf and cow anterior and posterior lens capsules) have been isolated by DEAE-cellulose chromatography after protease digestion. On the basis of composition, ion-exchange elution, electrophoretic mobility, and susceptibility to nitrous acid treatment heparan sulfate was identified as the predominant glycosaminoglycan component of each membrane. Quantitation of the heparan sulfate was achieved by a DEAE-cellulose microcolumn procedure and indicated that the amount of this component present in basement membranes spanned a wide range, extending from 0.3% of peptide weight in bovine and human tubular membranes to 6% in calf posterior lens capsule. Comparison of the heparan sulfate content of calf and cow anterior lens capsules indicated that it underwent a pronounced decrease with increasing age. Analyses of the glycosaminoglycan-peptide fractions from calf anterior and posterior lens capsules indicated hexuronic acid to xylose ratios of 29 and 37, respectively, and relatively low degrees of N-sulfation (0.2 N-sulfate, 0.6 total sulfate groups per repeating disaccharide). The composition of the lens capsule heparan sulfate was in many ways similar to that from bovine glomerular basement membrane ( N. Parthasarathy and R. G. Spiro, 1981, J. Biol. Chem. 256, 507–513 ). The present study also indicated that the heparan sulfate content of bovine glomerular basement membrane (0.8 mg/100 mg peptide) was not appreciably altered even by prolonged sonic treatment.

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