4.5 Article

Current structural biology of the heparin interactome

Journal

CURRENT OPINION IN STRUCTURAL BIOLOGY
Volume 34, Issue -, Pages 17-25

Publisher

CURRENT BIOLOGY LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.sbi.2015.05.007

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Heparin is the best known therapeutically active carbohydrate. It can bind and regulate multiple functional proteins such as coagulation cofactors, chemokines, and growth factors. This versatility has led to the recently developed concept of the heparin interactome - a group of proteins that, as the name implies, interact with heparin. The heparin interactome is structurally and functionally diverse. Though natural ligands of this class of proteins may be any of the glycosanninoglycans however, their structural biology is generally studied using heparin as a model compound. NMR spectroscopy contributes significantly to structural investigations of the resultant complexes in solution. This review aims therefore at discussing the current status in structural biology of the molecular complexes formed between heparin and its protein partners through the current concept of the heparin interactome.

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