heparitin-sulfate has been researched along with Dermatitis* in 2 studies
2 other study(ies) available for heparitin-sulfate and Dermatitis
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Heparin is required for the formation of granules in connective tissue mast cells.
Mast cells are innate immune cells strategically positioned around blood vessels near body surfaces. Their primary weapons are bioactive amines, mast cell-specific proteases, and cytokines stored in preformed granules. Mast cells granules constituents are packaged efficiently with the help of the highly negatively charged Heparan sulfate-derivative, Heparin. Heparin is one of the most widely used drugs to treat coagulation disorders, yet, it is not found in the circulation at a steady state, casting doubt that the prevention of blood clotting is its physiological function. Early studies using Topics: Animals; Connective Tissue; Dermatitis; Heparin; Heparitin Sulfate; Mast Cells; Mice | 2022 |
Blood vessels pattern heparan sulfate gradients between their apical and basolateral aspects.
A hallmark of immune cell trafficking is directional guidance via gradients of soluble or surface bound chemokines. Vascular endothelial cells produce, transport and deposit either their own chemokines or chemokines produced by the underlying stroma. Endothelial heparan sulfate (HS) was suggested to be a critical scaffold for these chemokine pools, but it is unclear how steep chemokine gradients are sustained between the lumenal and ablumenal aspects of blood vessels. Addressing this question by semi-quantitative immunostaining of HS moieties around blood vessels with a pan anti-HS IgM mAb, we found a striking HS enrichment in the basal lamina of resting and inflamed post capillary skin venules, as well as in high endothelial venules (HEVs) of lymph nodes. Staining of skin vessels with a glycocalyx probe further suggested that their lumenal glycocalyx contains much lower HS density than their basolateral extracellular matrix (ECM). This polarized HS pattern was observed also in isolated resting and inflamed microvascular dermal cells. Notably, progressive skin inflammation resulted in massive ECM deposition and in further HS enrichment around skin post capillary venules and their associated pericytes. Inflammation-dependent HS enrichment was not compromised in mice deficient in the main HS degrading enzyme, heparanase. Our results suggest that the blood vasculature patterns steep gradients of HS scaffolds between their lumenal and basolateral endothelial aspects, and that inflammatory processes can further enrich the HS content nearby inflamed vessels. We propose that chemokine gradients between the lumenal and ablumenal sides of vessels could be favored by these sharp HS scaffold gradients. Topics: Animals; Basement Membrane; Blood Vessels; Capillaries; Cells, Cultured; Chemokines; CHO Cells; Cricetinae; Cricetulus; Dermatitis; Endothelial Cells; Endothelium, Vascular; Extracellular Matrix; Female; Glucuronidase; Heparitin Sulfate; Humans; Mice; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Mice, Knockout; Mice, Transgenic; Microscopy, Fluorescence; Skin; Venules | 2014 |