heparitin-sulfate and 4-4-difluoro-4-bora-3a-4a-diaza-s-indacene

heparitin-sulfate has been researched along with 4-4-difluoro-4-bora-3a-4a-diaza-s-indacene* in 4 studies

Other Studies

4 other study(ies) available for heparitin-sulfate and 4-4-difluoro-4-bora-3a-4a-diaza-s-indacene

ArticleYear
High sensitivity (zeptomole) detection of BODIPY-labelled heparan sulfate (HS) disaccharides by ion-paired RP-HPLC and LIF detection enables analysis of HS from mosquito midguts.
    Analytical methods : advancing methods and applications, 2023, 03-16, Volume: 15, Issue:11

    The fine structure of heparan sulfate (HS), the glycosaminoglycan polysaccharide component of cell surface and extracellular matrix HS proteoglycans, coordinates the complex cell signalling processes that control homeostasis and drive development in multicellular animals. In addition, HS is involved in the infection of mammals by viruses, bacteria and parasites. The current detection limit for fluorescently labelled HS disaccharides (low femtomole; 10

    Topics: Animals; Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid; Culicidae; Disaccharides; Heparitin Sulfate; Mammals

2023
Disaccharide compositional analysis of heparan sulfate and heparin polysaccharides using UV or high-sensitivity fluorescence (BODIPY) detection.
    Nature protocols, 2010, Volume: 5, Issue:12

    One of the first steps in characterizing heparan sulfate (HS) and its close relative heparin is to conduct disaccharide composition analysis. This provides an overall picture of the structure of the polysaccharide in terms of its constituent disaccharides. This is of importance, for example, in the initial characterization of spatially and temporally regulated structures. Two protocols for conducting disaccharide analysis are presented here, both exploiting exhaustive digestion of the polysaccharide, yielding constituent disaccharides, by bacterial heparin lyases. The first method, suitable for microgram quantities of material, relies on the separation of the disaccharides by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) coupled to ultraviolet absorbance detection and can be performed in 2 d. The second exploits reducing end-labeling with the fluorophore BODIPY hydrazide, separation by HPLC, and subsequent fluorescence detection and quantitation. The latter is a high-sensitivity method that requires nanograms of starting material and has a detection limit in the low fmol range, and is thus the most sensitive method for disaccharide compositional analysis of HS yet reported. Fluorescence detection can be routinely carried out in 3 d.

    Topics: Boron Compounds; Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid; Disaccharides; Fluorescent Dyes; Heparin; Heparitin Sulfate; Spectrophotometry, Ultraviolet

2010
Rapid purification and high sensitivity analysis of heparan sulfate from cells and tissues: toward glycomics profiling.
    The Journal of biological chemistry, 2009, Sep-18, Volume: 284, Issue:38

    Studies on glycosaminoglycans and proteoglycans (PGs) have been hampered by difficulties in isolation and analysis by traditional methods that are laborious and lack sensitivity and throughput. Here we demonstrate a simple method for rapid isolation of proteoglycans (RIP) employing phenol/guanidine/chloroform reagent to purify heparan sulfate (HS) PGs quantitatively from various tissues and cells. We further show that this generic purification methodology, when applied in concert with a BODIPY fluorescent label, permits structural analyses on RIP-purified HS at approximately 1,000-fold higher sensitivity than standard UV detection methods and approximately 10-100-fold higher sensitivity than previous fluorescence detection methods. The utility of RIP-BODIPY methodology was demonstrated by rapid profiling of HS structural composition from small tissue samples, multiple mouse organs, and as little as a few thousand cultured cells. It was also used to generate novel insights into in vivo structural changes in HS from Sulf1 knock-out mice for the first time that differed significantly from previous observations limited to tissue culture experiments. RIP was also applied to purify HS for bioassay testing, exemplified by cell assays of fibroblast growth factor signaling activation; this generated data from 2-O-sulfotransferase knock-out mice and revealed an unexpected deficiency in fibroblast growth factor activation by HS from heterozygous mice. These data demonstrate that RIP will underpin emerging efforts to develop glycomics profiling strategies for HS and other glycosaminoglycans to explore their structure-function relationships in complex biological systems.

    Topics: 3T3 Cells; Animals; Boron Compounds; Female; Fibroblast Growth Factors; Heparitin Sulfate; Mice; Mice, Knockout; Signal Transduction; Sulfotransferases

2009
High sensitivity separation and detection of heparan sulfate disaccharides.
    Journal of chromatography. A, 2006, Nov-24, Volume: 1135, Issue:1

    Eight Delta-disaccharide standards from heparan sulfate/heparin were derivatized with the fluorophore 4,4-difluoro-5,7- dimethyl-4-bora-3a,4a-diaza-s-indacene-3-propionic acid, hydrazide (BODIPY) via formation of a Schiff's base and separated using HPAEC on a Propac PA1 column with a linear salt gradient and isocratic 150 mM NaOH. Detection was with an in-line fluorescence detector. The standard deviation (sigma(n-1)) in retention times were 0.7-2% over nine runs. The limit of detection, was 100 fmol (100 x 10(-15)mol) of BODIPY labeled Delta-disaccharides, representing considerably improved detection compared to other fluorophore labeled derivatives and, unlike these, required no further purification steps. Separation and improved detection of BODIPY-Delta-disaccharide conjugates will assist the structural analysis of HS and the development of improved sequencing methodologies.

    Topics: Boron Compounds; Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid; Disaccharides; Fluorescent Dyes; Heparitin Sulfate; Reproducibility of Results; Salts; Sensitivity and Specificity; Sodium Hydroxide; Spectrometry, Mass, Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization; Time Factors

2006