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Merck

The biochemistry and immunohistochemistry of versican.

Methods in cell biology (2018-01-10)
Stephen P Evanko, Christina K Chan, Pamela Y Johnson, Charles W Frevert, Thomas N Wight
RESUMO

Versican is a chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan found in the extracellular matrix that is important for changes in cell phenotype associated with development and disease. Versican has been shown to be involved in cardiovascular disorders, as well as lung disease and fibrosis, inflammatory bowel disease, cancer, and several other diseases that have an inflammatory component. Versican was first identified as a fibroblast proteoglycan and forms large multimolecular complexes with hyaluronan and other components of the provisional matrix during wound healing and inflammation. The biology of versican has been well studied. Versican plays a major role in embryogenesis, particularly heart formation, where versican deletion proves lethal. The ability to purify versican to characterize and to use in experimental systems is vital to defining its role in development and disease. Protein expression systems have proven challenging to obtain milligram quantities of full-length versican. Here, we describe proteoglycan biochemical purification techniques that have been developed by others, but which we have adapted to use with our source tissues and cells. We also include methods for immunohistochemical localization and quantitation of versican in tissue sections.

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Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-Versican Antibody, a.a. 1360-1439 of mouse versican, Chemicon®, from rabbit
Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-Versican Antibody, a.a. 535-598 of mouse versican, Chemicon®, from rabbit