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Commentary Open Access
Volume 5 | Issue 3 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.33696/immunology.5.171

Non-reducing End of Heparin Tri-saccharide is a Scavenger Tool to Detoxify the Glucose Toxicity in Diabetes

  • 1School of Medicine, New York Medical College, Valhalla, NY 10595, USA
  • 2Department of Biomedical Engineering, Lerner Research Institute, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, OH 44195, USA
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Corresponding Author

Vincent Hascall, hascalv@ccf.org

Received Date: September 13, 2023

Accepted Date: September 18, 2023

Abstract

Heparin is a highly sulfated, hence highly polyanionic, glycosaminoglycan with a repeating disaccharide that contains a hexuronic acid, and it has been used as an anticoagulant clinically for more than half a century. Daily IP injections of small amounts of heparin in the STZ diabetic rat prevented these pathological responses even though the animals sustained hyperglycemic levels of glucose throughout. However, the structural determinant that mediates this activity is not clear. This paper describes our finding that the responses of hyperglycemic dividing mesangial cells to heparin are mediated by its non-reducing terminal trisaccharide and proposes that the non-reducing end tri-saccharide of heparin acts as a scavenger tool to detoxify the glucose toxicity in diabetes.

Keywords

Hyperglycemia, Intracellular hyaluronan, ER stress, Autophagy, Hyaluronan matrix, Inflammation, Mesangial cell, Diabetic nephropathy, Heparin, Heparin trisaccharide

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