Abstract
1. Polysaccharide in a heparin-producing mouse mastocytoma was pulse-labelled in vivo with [35S] sulphate, and after various periods of time was isolated from subcellular fractions. Such fractions were recovered from tissue homogenates by consecutive centrifugations at 1000g for 10min, 20000g for 20min and 100000g for 1h. Initially the 35S-labelled polysaccharide formed occurred principally in the second centrifugal fraction (20000g precipitate), with small amounts in the first (granular) and third (microsomal) fractions. Analysis for glycosyltransferase activity confirmed that glycosaminoglycans were formed chiefly in particles sedimenting at 20000g. Molecules of this newly synthesized polysaccharide were considerably larger than those of commercially available heparin, as judged from gel chromatography. 2. Within the first hour after injection of [35S]sulphate, most of the labelled polysaccharide was redistributed from the second to the first centrifugal fraction. During, and possibly also after, this shift, the macromolecular polysaccharide was degraded, ultimately to the size of commercial heparin. The degradation process appeared complete 6h after injection of [35S]sulphate. 3. Particulate subcellular fractions were incubated with macromolecular [35S]heparin and the products were analysed by gel chromatography. Significant degradation of the substrate occurred only with the second centrifugal fraction. Further characterization of this fraction, by density-gradient centrifugation in iso-osmotic colloidal silica, revealed a single visible band of particles, at approximately the same density at lysosomes. This band contained all the β-glucuronidase, 35S-labelled endogenous polysacchride and heparin-degrading enzyme present in the second fraction.