scholarly journals Articular Cartilage: The Destruction of Bilayers and Deactivation of Phospholipid Molecules

To our knowleadge the coaugulation by interacton of β2 -Glycoprotein I (β2 -GP I) with the phospholipid membrane is required to verify this hypothesis. The open hockey stick-like conformation occurs when protonated amino acid functional group (-NH3 +) β2-GP I is complexed to negatively charged phospholipids functional group (-PO4 - ) resulting in the destruction of bilayers and the deactivation of phospholipid molecules.

1986 ◽  
Vol 64 (9) ◽  
pp. 1864-1869 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Bolte ◽  
B. Robert ◽  
J. Lemaire

Photochemical and thermal oxidation that occurs between chromium(VI) and various amino acids leads quantitatively to chromium(III). Spectroscopic studies rule out the formation of a chromium(VI) – amino acid complex in the ground state. Thermal oxidoreduction involves HCrO4−, the protonated amino acid [Formula: see text] and H+ ions. Chromium(V) appears to be an intermediate species in the reaction. HCrO4− is the only absorbing compound and the photochemical chromium(VI) reduction proceeds through a reaction between [HCrO4−]* and the amino acid. Chromium(V) is the primary product of the charge transfer reaction. Reduction quantum yields are proportional to the amino acid concentration and pH independent in the HCrO4− existence range.


2014 ◽  
Vol 24 (17) ◽  
pp. 4171-4175 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carlo Ballatore ◽  
Bryant Gay ◽  
Longchuan Huang ◽  
Katie Herbst Robinson ◽  
Michael J. James ◽  
...  

1992 ◽  
Vol 284 (2) ◽  
pp. 589-593 ◽  
Author(s):  
P Loulakis ◽  
A Shrikhande ◽  
G Davis ◽  
C A Maniglia

Bovine articular cartilage was cultured both in the presence and in the absence of human recombinant interleukin-1 alpha (IL-1) (100 units/ml). Addition of this cytokine stimulated matrix degradation approx. 3-fold. This increased degradation permitted characterization of the large chondroitin sulphate proteoglycan (aggrecan) fragments accumulating in the media. When compared with controls, the proteoglycans isolated from the medium of cultures treated with IL-1 exhibited a decrease in the Kav. (control 0.25; IL-1-treated 0.37), determined by Sepharose CL-2B chromatography. This decrease in proteoglycan size was accompanied by a decreased ability of these monomers to associate with hyaluronic acid. Thus only 20% of the proteoglycans isolated from the medium of IL-1-treated cultures, compared with 39% for control cultures, had the capacity to form high-M(r) aggregates with hyaluronic acid. SDS/PAGE analysis of the proteoglycans from the media of IL-1-treated cultures demonstrated several large proteoglycan protein-core bands (M(r) 144,000-380,000). The protein-core bands with M(r) 144,000-266,000 exhibited a significantly decreased reactivity with monoclonal antibody 1-C-6 (specific for domains G1 and G2). The N-terminal amino acid sequence of four of these protein-core bands (M(r) 144,000, 173,000, 214,000 and 266,000) yielded sequences LGQRPPV-Y-PQLF(E), AGEGP(S)GILEL-GAP(S)-AP(D)M, GLG-VEL-LPGE and (A)RGSVIL-AKPDFEV-P-A. A comparison of these N-terminal amino acid sequences with the published proteoglycan sequence for bovine nasal cartilage [Oldberg, Antonsson & Heinegård (1987) Biochem. J. 243, 255-259], rat chondrosarcoma [Doege, Sasaki, Horigan, Hassell & Yamada (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 17757-17769] and human articular cartilage [Doege, Sasaki, Kimura & Yamada (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266, 894-902] permitted assignment of their relative positions on the core protein. Furthermore, on the basis of this similarity to published sequence, putative sites of enzymic cleavage were constructed. These theoretical cleavage sites revealed a glutamic acid residue in the P1 position and an uncharged polar or non-polar residue in the P1′ position.


2017 ◽  
Vol 13 ◽  
pp. 2186-2213 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charlotte M Sevrain ◽  
Mathieu Berchel ◽  
Hélène Couthon ◽  
Paul-Alain Jaffrès

The phosphonic acid functional group, which is characterized by a phosphorus atom bonded to three oxygen atoms (two hydroxy groups and one P=O double bond) and one carbon atom, is employed for many applications due to its structural analogy with the phosphate moiety or to its coordination or supramolecular properties. Phosphonic acids were used for their bioactive properties (drug, pro-drug), for bone targeting, for the design of supramolecular or hybrid materials, for the functionalization of surfaces, for analytical purposes, for medical imaging or as phosphoantigen. These applications are covering a large panel of research fields including chemistry, biology and physics thus making the synthesis of phosphonic acids a determinant question for numerous research projects. This review gives, first, an overview of the different fields of application of phosphonic acids that are illustrated with studies mainly selected over the last 20 years. Further, this review reports the different methods that can be used for the synthesis of phosphonic acids from dialkyl or diaryl phosphonate, from dichlorophosphine or dichlorophosphine oxide, from phosphonodiamide, or by oxidation of phosphinic acid. Direct methods that make use of phosphorous acid (H3PO3) and that produce a phosphonic acid functional group simultaneously to the formation of the P–C bond, are also surveyed. Among all these methods, the dealkylation of dialkyl phosphonates under either acidic conditions (HCl) or using the McKenna procedure (a two-step reaction that makes use of bromotrimethylsilane followed by methanolysis) constitute the best methods to prepare phosphonic acids.


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