Heparin is a highly negatively charged sulfated polysaccharide with a heterogeneous mixture of diverse chains with different lengths that consist of repeating copolymers of 1–4 linked iduronic acid and glucosamine residues in a semirandom order (Scheme 1).[1] This polysaccharide regulates a variety of cellular processes, plays important roles in biological systems, and interacts with a wide range of protein targets.[2] Heparin is widely used as ...
[Barnard, Anna; Posocco, Paola; Pricl, Sabrina; Calderon, Marcelo; Haag, Rainer; Hwang, Mark E.; Shum, Victor W. T.; Pack, Daniel W.; Smith, David K. Journal of the American Chemical Society, 2011 , vol. 133, # 50 p. 20288 - 20300]
[Barnard, Anna; Posocco, Paola; Pricl, Sabrina; Calderon, Marcelo; Haag, Rainer; Hwang, Mark E.; Shum, Victor W. T.; Pack, Daniel W.; Smith, David K. Journal of the American Chemical Society, 2011 , vol. 133, # 50 p. 20288 - 20300]