Heparin, carboxy-group-reduced heparin, several sulphated monosaccharides and disaccharides formed from heparin, and a tetrasaccharide prepared from chondroitin sulphate were treated at 100 degrees C with hydrazine containing 1% hydrazine sulphate for periods sufficient to cause complete N-deacetylation of the N-acetylhexosamine residues. Under these hydrazinolysis conditions both the N-sulphate and the O-sulphate substituents on these compounds were completely stable. However, the uronic acid residues were converted into their hydrazide derivatives at rates that depended on the uronic acid structures. Unsubstituted L-iduronic acid residues reacted much more slowly than did unsubstituted D-glucuronic acid or 2-O-sulphated L-iduronic acid residues. The chemical modification of the carboxy groups resulted in a low rate of C-5 epimerization of the uronic acid residues. The hydrazinolysis reaction also caused a partial depolymerization of heparin but not of carboxy-group-reduced heparin. Treatment of the hydrazinolysis products with HNO2 at either pH 4 or pH 1.5 or with HIO3 converted the uronic acid hydrazides back into uronic acid residues. The use of the hydrazinolysis reaction in studies of the structures of uronic acid-containing polymers and the implications of the uronic acid hydrazide formation are discussed.
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January 1984
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Research Article|
January 01 1984
Hydrazinolysis of heparin and other glycosaminoglycans
Publisher: Portland Press Ltd
Online ISSN: 1470-8728
Print ISSN: 0264-6021
© 1984 London: The Biochemical Society
1984
Biochem J (1984) 217 (1): 187–197.
Citation
P N Shaklee, H E Conrad; Hydrazinolysis of heparin and other glycosaminoglycans. Biochem J 1 January 1984; 217 (1): 187–197. doi: https://doi.org/10.1042/bj2170187
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