Different 3-O-sulfated heparin sequences found in
animals and produced chemoenzymatically. (1) A minimum sequence of heparin
(pentasaccharide) involved in AT-binding. It has been proposed that the
pentasaccharide is synthesized according to the classical biosynthetic pathway,
in which the enzymatic events happen through a hierarchical sequence, as
described by Lindahl, 1977.3 (2
and 3) Sequences present in heparin described in Lindahl, 1994.24 (4) Heparin sequence found in
clams that does not correlate with affinity for AT.17 (5) Sequence described in shrimp
L. vannameithat has negligible
anticoagulant activity despite its high affinity for AT and unusually higher
proportion of 3-O-sulfated residues.19 (6 and 7) Scheme for
3-O-sulfated heparin sequences described by this study. The
starting material for chemical modifications was porcine intestinal mucosa
heparin, the schemes show iduronate rather than glucuronate once heparin does
have significant higher proportions of iduronate. (8 and 9) Different
oligosaccharide substrates required by HS3ST isoforms. While HS3ST3 must precede
the 6-O-sulfation to generate the
I2S-ANS3S6S, HS3ST1 can only work after the
6-O-sulfation step.15