Pejler, Gunnar
- Department of Veterinary Medical Chemistry, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Research article1996Peer reviewedOpen access
Pejler, Gunnar
Protamines are polycationic proteins that are widely used for neutralisation of the anticoagulant action of heparin. However, several reports have shown adverse, mast cell-dependent reactions to protamine. The exact mechanism by which protamine causes these adverse effects is not clear. In the present study, the possibility that protamine may influence mast cell chymase function was investigated. Mast cell chymase is in vivo recovered in a macromolecular complex with heparin proteoglycan, and this interaction is essential for expression of optimal enzymatic activity. Protamine was shown to strongly reduce the activity of mast cell chymase by a mechanism that involved displacement of the chymase from heparin proteoglycan.
protamine; mast cell; chymase; rat mast cell protease 1; heparin proteoglycan
FEBS Letters
1996, volume: 383, number: 3, pages: 170-174
Publisher: ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
Cell and Molecular Biology
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/52791