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An Emerging Role of Sonic Hedgehog Shedding as a Modulator of Heparan Sulfate Interactions
Authors:Stefanie Ohlig  Ute Pickhinke  Svetlana Sirko  Shyam Bandari  Daniel Hoffmann  Rita Dreier  Pershang Farshi  Magdalena G?tz  Kay Grobe
Institution:From the Institute for Physiological Chemistry and Pathobiochemistry, University Hospital Münster, Waldeyerstrasse 15, D-48149 Münster, Germany, ;the §Institute for Physiological Genomics, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, Pettenkoferstrasse 12, D-80336 Munich, Germany, and ;the Center for Medical Biotechnology, University of Duisburg-Essen, Universitätsstrasse 1-5, D-45117 Essen, Germany
Abstract:Major developmental morphogens of the Hedgehog (Hh) family act at short range and long range to direct cell fate decisions in vertebrate and invertebrate tissues. To this end, Hhs are released from local sources and act at a distance on target cells that express the Hh receptor Patched. However, morphogen secretion and spreading are not passive processes because all Hhs are synthesized as dually (N- and C-terminal) lipidated proteins that firmly tether to the surface of producing cells. On the cell surface, Hhs associate with each other and with heparan sulfate (HS) proteoglycans. This raises the question of how Hh solubilization and spreading is achieved. We recently discovered that Sonic hedgehog (Shh) is solubilized by proteolytic processing (shedding) of lipidated peptide termini in vitro. Because unprocessed N termini block Patched receptor binding sites in the cluster, we further suggested that their proteolytic removal is required for simultaneous Shh activation. In this work we confirm inactivity of unprocessed protein clusters and demonstrate restored biological Shh function upon distortion or removal of N-terminal amino acids and peptides. We further show that N-terminal Shh processing targets and inactivates the HS binding Cardin-Weintraub (CW) motif, resulting in soluble Shh clusters with their HS binding capacities strongly reduced. This may explain the ability of Shh to diffuse through the HS-containing extracellular matrix, whereas other HS-binding proteins are quickly immobilized. Our in vitro findings are supported by the presence of CW-processed Shh in murine brain samples, providing the first in vivo evidence for Shh shedding and subsequent solubilization of N-terminal-truncated proteins.
Keywords:Cell Surface Protein  Extracellular Matrix Proteins  Glycobiology  Hedgehog  Heparan Sulfate  Heparin-binding Protein  Protein Processing  Shedding
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