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1.
The dysregulation of the metabolism of glycosaminoglycan and protein components of extracellular matrix (ECM) is a typical feature of diabetic complications. High glucose-induced enrichment of ECM with hyaluronan (HA) not only affects tissue structural integrity, but influences cell metabolic response due to the variety of effects depending on the HA polymer molecular weight. TSP-1-dependent activation of TGFbeta1 axis is known to mediate numerous matrix disorders in diabetes, but its role concerning HA has not been studied so far. In this work we demonstrated that 30 mM D-glucose increased the incorporation of [(3)H]glucosamine in high-molecular-weight (> 2000 kDa) HA of medium and matrix compartments of human mesangial cultures. Simultaneously, the synthesis of HA with lower molecular weight and HA degradation were not altered. The cause of the increased high-molecular-weight HA synthesis consisted in the up-regulation of hyaluronan synthase (HAS) 2 mRNA without alterations of the expression of HAS3, which generates HA of lower molecular weight. D-Glucose at 30 mM also stimulated the production of transforming growth factor beta1 (TGFbeta1), the excessive activation of which was determined by the up-regulation of thrombospondin-1 (TSP-1). The blockage of TGFbeta1 action either by neutralizing anti-TGFbeta1 antibodies or by quenching the TGFbeta1 activation (with TSP-1-derived synthetic GGWSHW peptide) abolished the effect of high glucose on HAS2 mRNA expression and normalized the synthesis of HA. Exogenous human TGFbeta1 had the same effect on HAS2 expression and HA synthesis as high glucose treatment. Therefore, we supposed that TSP-1-dependent TGFbeta1 activation is involved in the observed high glucose effect on HA metabolism. Since high-molecular-weight HA polymers, unlike middle- and low-molecular weight HA oligosaccharides, are known to possess anti-inflammatory and anti-fibrotic functions, we suppose that the enrichment of mesangial matrix with high-molecular-weight HA may represent an endogenous mechanism to limit renal injury in diabetes.  相似文献   

2.
Hyaluronan (HA) was depolymerized by hydroxyl radicals generated from hydrogen peroxide and cupric ions. Inhibition of HA degradation by four well-known antioxidants was investigated, as HA can scavenge reactive oxygen species (ROS). Change in hyaluronan molecular weight was observed by size-exclusion chromatography. Inhibition of HA degradation was estimated from the retention times observed. It was found that HA degradation was inhibited in a clearly concentration-dependent manner by mannitol, thiourea and vinpocetine. Propofol also inhibited the depolymerization, but its concentration-dependent effect was not so clear. The antioxidant concentrations at which HA degradation was decreased by 50% were 42 microM for thiourea; 1.35 microM for vinpocetine; and 0.39 microM for propofol. A concentration of 26.51 mM of mannitol was needed to attain the same inhibitory effect. Although many factors are involved in a therapeutic response, the results obtained in this study support the idea that HA may be protected from ROS attack by the concomitant use of well-known antioxidants.  相似文献   

3.
Dynamic viscosity (eta) of the high-molecular-weight hyaluronan (HA) solution was measured by a Brookfield rotational viscometer equipped with a Teflon cup and spindle of coaxial cylindrical geometry. The decrease of eta of the HA solution, indicating degradation of the biopolymer, was induced by a system containing H2O2 alone or H2O2 plus CuCl2. The reaction system H2O2 plus CuCl2 as investigated by EPR spin-trapping technique revealed the formation of a four-line EPR signal characteristic of a *DMPO-OH spin adduct. Thus, hydroxyl radicals are implicated in degradation of high-molecular-weight HA by the system containing H2O2 and CuCl2.  相似文献   

4.
Hyaluronidase 2 (Hyal2) is a hyaluronan (HA)-degrading enzyme found intracellularly or/and anchored to the plasma membrane through glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI). Normal human bronchial epithelial cells (NHBE) grown at the air-liquid interphase (ALI), treated with PI-specific phospholipase C (PI-PLC), exhibited increased Hyal activity in secretions and decreased protein and activity on the apical membrane, confirming that GPI-anchored Hyal2 is expressed in NHBE cells and it remains active in its soluble form. We have reported that HA degradation was mediated by reactive oxygen species (ROS) in human airways. Here we show that ROS increase Hyal2 expression and activity in NHBE cells and that the p38MAPK signaling pathway is involved in this effect. Hyal2 induction was confirmed by using small interfering RNA (siRNA) expressing lentivirus. These in vitro findings correlated in vivo with smokers, where increased Hyal2 immunoreactivity in the epithelium was associated with augmented levels of HA and the appearance of low molecular mass HA species in bronchial secretions. In summary, this work provides evidence that ROS induce Hyal2, suggesting that Hyal2 is likely responsible for the sustained HA fragmentation in the airway lumen observed in inflammatory conditions associated with oxidative stress.  相似文献   

5.
Weigel PH 《IUBMB life》2002,54(4):201-211
The first gene for a glycosaminoglycan synthase to be cloned was the hyaluronan (HA) synthase from S. pyogenes, which we reported in 1993. Since then, at least 20 bacterial, viral, or eukaryotic HA synthase gene or cDNA sequences and two bacterial chondroitin synthase genes have been reported. During the last decade a great deal has been elucidated about the structure, function, and mechanisms of action of the bacterial HA synthases, which are the focus of this review. Very rapid progress has been made in elucidating the mechanism of HA synthesis by the HA synthase from Pasteurella multocida. Although little of this information is applicable to understanding the mechanism of action of streptococcal HA synthases, good progress has also been made in understanding how these latter enzymes work.  相似文献   

6.
Bovine testicular hyaluronidase (BTH) has been used as a spreading factor for many years and was primarily characterized by its enzymatic activity. As recombinant human hyaluronidases are now available the bovine preparations can be replaced by the human enzymes. However, data on the pH-dependent activity of hyaluronidases reported in literature are inconsistent in part or even contradictory. Detection of the pH-dependent activity of PH-20 type hyaluronidases, i.e. recombinant human PH-20 (rhPH-20) and BTH, showed a shift of the pH optimum from acidic pH values in a colorimetric activity assay to higher pH values in a turbidimetric activity assay. Contrarily, recombinant human Hyal-1 (rhHyal-1) and bee venom hyaluronidase (BVH) exhibited nearly identical pH profiles in both commonly used types of activity assays. Analysis of the hyaluronic acid (HA) degradation products by capillary zone electrophoresis showed that hyaluronan was catabolized by rhHyal-1 continuously into HA oligosaccharides. BTH and, to a less extent, rhPH-20 exhibited a different mode of action: at acidic pH (pH 4.5) HA was degraded as described for rhHyal-1, while at elevated pH (pH 5.5) small oligosaccharides were produced in addition to HA fragments of medium molecular weight, thus explaining the pH-dependent discrepancies in the activity assays. Our results suggest a sub-classification of mammalian-type hyaluronidases into a PH-20/BTH and a Hyal-1/BVH subtype. As the biological effects of HA fragments are reported to depend on the size of the molecules it can be speculated that different pH values at the site of hyaluronan degradation may result in different biological responses.  相似文献   

7.
Tumor growth and development is influenced by its microenvironment. A major extracellular matrix molecule involved in cancer progression is hyaluronan (HA). Hyaluronan and expression of a number of hyaladherin family proteins are dramatically increased in many cancer malignancies. One such hyaladherin, hyaluronan-binding protein 1 (HABP1/p32/gC1qR) has been considered to be a biomarker for tumor progression. Interestingly, overexpression of HABP1 in fibroblast has been shown to increase autophagy via generation of excess reactive oxygen species (ROS) and depletion of HA leading to apoptosis. Cancerous cells are often found to exhibit decreased rate of proteolysis/autophagy in comparison to their normal counterparts. To determine if HABP1 levels alter tumorigenicity of cancerous cells, HepR21, the stable transfectant overexpressing HABP1 in HepG2 cell line was derived. HepR21 has been shown to have increased proliferation rate than HepG2, intracellular HA cable formation and enhanced tumor potency without any significant alteration of intracellular ROS. In this paper we have observed that HepR21 cells containing higher endogenous HA levels, have downregulated expression of the autophagic marker, MAP-LC3, consistent with unaltered levels of endogenous ROS. In fact, HepR21 cells seem to have significant resistance to exogenous ROS stimuli and glutathione depletion. HepR21 cells were also found to be more resilient to nutrient starvation in comparison to its parent cell line. Decline in intracellular HA levels and HA cables in HepR21 cells upon treatment with HAS inhibitor (4-MU), induced a surge in ROS levels leading to increased expression of MAP-LC3 and tumor suppressors Beclin 1 and PTEN. This suggests the importance of HABP1 induced HA cable formation in enhancing tumor potency by maintaining the oxidant levels and subsequent autophagic vacuolation.  相似文献   

8.
Hyaluronan (HA) oligosaccharides which can stimulate angiogenesis and suppress the growth of tumors have attracted more and more attention. In order to prepare pure and well-defined oligosaccharides from high-molecular-weight HA in a rapid and simple manner, an enzymatic degradation method was developed, which included degradation with a novel recombinant hyaluronan lyase (HA lyase, hyaluronidase, or HAase) and gel permeation chromatography. The HAase protein was expressed in Escherichia coli with the expression vector pBV220. The HAase was purified and refolded, and specific activity of the enzyme solution was 3800 U/mg. HA was degraded with HAase at the optimized conditions, yielding 46% and 31% of HA disaccharides and HA tetrasaccharides, respectively. These HA oligosaccharides were conveniently separated by consecutive column chromatography on Bio-gel P6 and were identified by HPLC–MS.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Hyaluronan (HA) has diverse functions in normal lung homeostasis and pulmonary disease. HA constitutes the major glycosaminoglycan in lung tissue, with HA degradation products, produced by hyaluronidase enzymes and reactive oxygen species, being implicated in several lung diseases, including acute lung injury, asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and pulmonary hypertension. The differential activities of HA and its degradation products are due, in part, to regulation of multiple HA-binding proteins, including cluster of differentiation 44 (CD44), Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4), HA-binding protein 2 (HABP2), and receptor for HA-mediated motility (RHAMM). Recent research indicates that exogenous administration of high-molecular-weight HA can serve as a novel therapeutic intervention for lung diseases, including lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced acute lung injury, sepsis/ventilator-induced lung injury, and airway hyperreactivity. This review focuses on the regulatory role of HA and HA-binding proteins in lung pathology and discusses the capacity of HA to augment and inhibit various lung diseases.  相似文献   

11.
It has become increasingly apparent that the high molecular mass glycosaminoglycan, hyaluronan (HA), is required for many morphogenetic processes during vertebrate development. This renewed understanding of the various developmental roles for HA, has come about largely through the advent of gene targeting approaches in the mouse. To date, mutations have been engineered in the enzymes responsible for biosynthesis and degradation and for those proteins that bind to HA within the extracellular matrix and at the cell surface. Collectively, the phenotypes resulting from these mutations demonstrate that HA is critical for normal mammalian embryogenesis and for various processes in postnatal and adult life (Table 1). In this article we will review our progress in understanding the biological functions for HA through targeted mutagenesis of the HA synthase 2 (Has2) and 3 (Has3) genes. Data that has been obtained from a conventional targeted disruption of the Has2 gene, is presented in an accompanying review by Camenisch and McDonald. More specifically, in this review we will provide an overview of the conditional gene targeting strategy being used to create tissue-specific deficiencies in Has2 function, along with our progress in understanding the role for Has3-dependent HA biosynthesis. Published in 2003.  相似文献   

12.
Hyaluronic acid (HA), or hyaluronan, is a natural polyelectrolyte, ubiquitous in human tissues. Exogenous HA has been a valuable material due to its wide range of medical applications, such as in osteoarthritis treatment, ophthalmic surgery, adhesion prevention after surgeries and wound healing, as well as cosmetic applications. However, to ensure the physicochemical and biological properties, a purity near to 99 % is a primary requirement, aiming clinical applications. To achieve this goal, various downstream operations have been used, aiming HA concentration, separation and purification. Precipitation with organic solvents has been a common operation in most purification processes, combined with other downstream operations such as precipitation with quaternary salts, filtration, adsorption and ion exchange. This work presents an updated review of HA purification, emphasizing the performance of the main downstream operations used to achieve highly purified HA, in the period from 1970 to 2019. We conclude that, in the majority of the published works, there is a lack of studies regarding the operational conditions, as well as an absence of the purification percentage development during the processes.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Since the content of hyaluronan (HA)-degrading enzymes in synovial fluid (SF), if any, is extremely low, the high rate of HA turnover in SF is to result from a cause different from enzymatic catabolism. An alternative and plausible mechanism is that of oxidative-reductive degradation of HA chains by a combined action of oxygen and transition metal cations maintained in a reduced oxidation state by ascorbate.  相似文献   

15.
Hyaluronan lyase (Hyal) is a surface enzyme occurring in many bacterial organisms including members of Streptococcus species. Streptococcal Hyal primarily degrades hyaluronan‐substrate (HA) of the extracellular matrix. This degradation appears to facilitate the spread of this bacterium throughout host tissues. Unlike purely endolytic degradation of its other substrates, unsulfated chondroitin or some chondroitin sulfates, the degradation of HA by Hyal proceeds by processive exolytic cleavage of one disaccharide at a time following an initial endolytic cut. Molecular dynamics (MD) studies of Hyal from Streptococcus pneumoniae are presented that address the enzyme's molecular mechanism of action and the role of domain motions for processive functionality. The analysis of extensive sub‐microsecond MD simulations of this enzyme action on HA‐substrates of different lengths and the connection between the domain dynamics of Hyal and the translocation of the HA‐substrate reveals that opening/closing and twisting domain motions of the Hyal are intimately linked to processive HA degradation. Enforced simulations confirmed this finding as the domain motions in SpnHyal were found to be induced by enforced substrate translocation. These results establish the dynamic interplay between Hyal flexibility and substrate translocation and provide insight into the processive mechanism of Hyal. Proteins 2009. © 2008 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

16.
Hyaluronan (HA), an unbranched polysaccharide consisting of repeated glucuronic acid/N-acetylglucosamine disaccharide units, is ubiquitously present in the extracellular matrix of many tissues (for a more comprehensive review see: Fraser et al., 1997). Increased amounts of hyaluronan are produced by solid tumors and tumor-associated fibroblasts, and tumor-induced HA is correlated with poor prognosis. HA is well known to stimulate the migration of a large variety of cell types. Stimulation of cell migration by HA has been explained by different mechanisms. HA was shown to specifically bind to cell surface receptors, and inhibition of HA-receptor function was demonstrated to decrease cell migration and tumor growth. On the other hand, HA as a large hydrophilic molecule is also known to modulate the extracellular packing of collagen and fibrin, leading to increased fiber size and porosity of extracellular substrates. Hence a modified matrix architecture might similarly account for increased locomotion of cells. In this review, we attempted to summarize the available data on HA-induced cell migration, with particular emphasis on the role of HA receptors in three-dimensional cell migration. Although the HA receptor CD44 has been shown to mediate migration of cells over two-dimensional hyaluronan-coated surfaces in vitro, there is only little evidence that HA-binding to CD44 or other HA receptors has major impact on the locomotion of cells through three-dimensional matrices in vivo. We showed recently that the promigratory effect of HA in fibrin gels is largely due to HA-mediated modulation of fibrin polymerization. By increasing the porosity of fibrin gels, HA strongly accelerates cell migration. The porosity of matrices therefore appears as an important and probably underestimated determinant of cell migration and tumor spread.  相似文献   

17.
A variety of obstacles have hindered the ultrastructural localization of hyaluronan (HA). These include a lack of adequate fixation techniques to prevent the loss of HA, the lack of highly sensitive and specific probes, and a lack of accessibility due to the masking of HA by HA-binding macromolecules such as proteoglycans and glycoproteins. Despite these problems, a number of studies, both biochemical and histochemical, have been published indicating that HA is not restricted to the extracellular milieu, but is also present intracellularly. This review focuses on the possible functions of intracellular HA, its potential relationships to extracellular HA structures, and implications for inflammatory processes.  相似文献   

18.
The degradation of high-molar-mass hyaluronan (HA) by copper(II) chloride and ascorbate was studied by means of rotational viscometry. It was found that even small amounts of CuCl(2) present in the oxidative system led to the pronounced degradation of HA, reflected in a rapid decrease of the dynamic viscosity of the biopolymer solution. Such degradation was induced by free radicals generated in elevated amounts in the presence of copper ions. Electron paramagnetic resonance investigations performed on a model oxidative system containing Cu(II) and ascorbic acid proved the formation of relatively stable ascorbate anion radicals resulting from the reaction of ascorbic acid with hydroxyl radicals. In this way, by scavenging the hydroxyl radicals, ascorbic acid protected HA from their degradative action. Matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time-of-flight (MALDI-TOF) mass spectrometry was applied to analyze the degraded HA. The results showed that only regular fragmentation of hyaluronan occurred using the mentioned oxidative system that led to the formation of HA oligomers with unaffected primary chemical structure.  相似文献   

19.
Hyaluronan (HA) is produced by keratinocytes in human skin organ culture, and degraded locally in epidermis by an unknown metabolic route. The present work tested whether reactive oxygen species (ROS), spontaneously produced in the tissue, could contribute to HA catabolism in epidermis. Epidermal HA was endogenously labeled with 3H-glucosamine for 24 h, then chased for 24 h in the presence of superoxide dismutase (SOD) and catalase to reduce the concentration of ROS. In control cultures, 35% of labeled HA was degraded during the 24 h chase while the corresponding figures in the presence of SOD and catalase were 19% and 23%, respectively (p < 0.05). Methionine, a quencher of hypochlorous acid, did not significantly inhibit the degradation. In additional experiments, the iron and copper chelator Detapac was even more effective, reducing the degradation to 8–9%, and suggesting that the ROS responsible for the degradation were produced in the Fenton reaction. Dermal HA, and proteoglycans in both epidermis and dermis were not influenced by the treatments, indicating that the inhibition by SOD, catalase and Detapac on epidermal HA catabolism was specific. It is suggested that endogenous ROS is involved in the catabolism human epidermal HA.  相似文献   

20.
Mouse LYVE-1 is an endocytic receptor for hyaluronan in lymphatic endothelium   总被引:41,自引:0,他引:41  
The glycosaminoglycan hyaluronan is a key substrate for cell migration in tissues during inflammation, wound healing, and neoplasia. Unlike other matrix components, hyaluronan (HA) is turned over rapidly, yet most degradation occurs not locally but within distant lymph nodes, through mechanisms that are not yet understood. While it is not clear which receptors are involved in binding and uptake of hyaluronan within the lymphatics, one likely candidate is the lymphatic endothelial hyaluronan receptor LYVE-1 recently described in our laboratory (Banerji, S., Ni, J., Wang, S., Clasper, S., Su, J., Tammi, R., Jones, M., and Jackson, D.G. (1999) J. Cell Biol. 144, 789-801). Here we present evidence that LYVE-1 is involved in the uptake of hyaluronan by lymphatic endothelial cells using a new murine LYVE-1 orthologue identified from the EST data base. We show that mouse LYVE-1 both binds and internalizes hyaluronan in transfected 293T fibroblasts in vitro and demonstrate using immunoelectron microscopy that it is distributed equally among the luminal and abluminal surfaces of lymphatic vessels in vivo. In addition, we show by means of specific antisera that expression of mouse LYVE-1 remains restricted to the lymphatics in homozygous knockout mice lacking a functional gene for CD44, the closest homologue of LYVE-1 and the only other Link superfamily HA receptor known to date. Together these results suggest a role for LYVE-1 in the transport of HA from tissue to lymph and imply that further novel hyaluronan receptors must exist that can compensate for the loss of CD44 function.  相似文献   

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