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1.
Syndecan from embryonic tooth mesenchyme binds tenascin.   总被引:13,自引:0,他引:13  
Syndecan is a cell surface heparan sulfate-rich proteoglycan found on various epithelial cells but also in some embryonic mesenchymal tissues. We have immunoisolated syndecan from embryonic tooth mesenchyme that appeared as a 250-300-kDa molecule (Kav = 0.3 in Sepharose 4B), containing only heparan sulfate side chains (Mr = 35,000). Northern analysis of whole tooth germs and tooth mesenchymes also revealed high expression of syndecan mRNAs (2.6 and 3.4 kilobases). In the binding assay utilizing nitrocellulose as a solid phase to immobilize matrix molecules, syndecan immunoisolated from tooth mesenchyme revealed binding to tenascin, and this interaction was shown to be mediated via heparan sulfate side chains. In contrast, syndecan from mouse mammary epithelial cells showed only weak interaction with tenascin. We propose that syndecan and tenascin may represent interactions of a cell surface receptor and a matrix ligand involved in mesenchymal cell condensation and differentiation during early organogenesis.  相似文献   

2.
Treating the liposome-intercalatable heparan sulfate proteoglycans from human lung fibroblasts and mammary epithelial cells with heparitinase and chondroitinase ABC revealed different core protein patterns in the two cell types. Lung fibroblasts expressed heparan sulfate proteoglycans with core proteins of approximately 35, 48/90 (fibroglycan), 64 (glypican), and 125 kDa and traces of a hybrid proteoglycan which carried both heparan sulfate and chondroitin sulfate chains. The mammary epithelial cells, in contrast, expressed large amounts of a hybrid proteoglycan and heparan sulfate proteoglycans with core proteins of approximately 35 and 64 kDa, but the fibroglycan and 125-kDa cores were not detectable in these cells. Phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C and monoclonal antibody (mAb) S1 identified the 64-kDa core proteins as glypican, whereas mAb 2E9, which also reacted with proteoglycan from mouse mammary epithelial cells, tentatively identified the hybrid proteoglycans as syndecan. The expression of syndecan in lung fibroblasts was confirmed by amplifying syndecan cDNA sequences from fibroblastic mRNA extracts and demonstrating the cross-reactivity of the encoded recombinant core protein with mAb 2E9. Northern blots failed to detect a message for fibroglycan in the mammary epithelial cells and in several other epithelial cell lines tested, while confirming the expression of both glypican and syndecan in these cells. Confluent fibroblasts expressed higher levels of syndecan mRNA than exponentially growing fibroblasts, but these levels remained lower than observed in epithelial cells. These data formally identify one of the cell surface proteoglycans of human lung fibroblasts as syndecan and indicate that the expression of the cell surface proteoglycans varies in different cell types and under different culture conditions.  相似文献   

3.
Cultured monolayers of NMuMG mouse mammary epithelial cells have augmented amounts of cell surface chondroitin sulfate glycosaminoglycan (GAG) when cultured in transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta), presumably because of increased synthesis on their cell surface proteoglycan (named syndecan), previously shown to contain chondroitin sulfate and heparan sulfate GAG. This increase occurs throughout the monolayer as shown using soluble thrombospondin as a binding probe. However, comparison of staining intensity of the GAG chains and syndecan core protein suggests variability among cells in the attachment of GAG chains to the core protein. Characterization of purified syndecan confirms the enhanced addition of chondroitin sulfate in TGF-beta: (a) radiosulfate incorporation into chondroitin sulfate is increased 6.2-fold in this proteoglycan fraction and heparan sulfate is increased 1.8-fold, despite no apparent increase in amount of core protein per cell, and (b) the size and density of the proteoglycan are increased, but reduced by removal of chondroitin sulfate. This is shown in part by treatment of the cells with 0.5 mM xyloside that blocks the chondroitin sulfate addition without affecting heparan sulfate. Higher xyloside concentrations block heparan sulfate as well and syndecan appears at the cell surface as core protein without GAG chains. The enhanced amount of GAG on syndecan is partly attributed to an increase in chain length. Whereas this accounts for the additional heparan sulfate synthesis, it is insufficient to explain the total increase in chondroitin sulfate; an approximately threefold increase in chondroitin sulfate chain addition occurs as well, confirmed by assessing chondroitin sulfate ABC lyase (ABCase)-generated chondroitin sulfate linkage stubs on the core protein. One of the effects of TGF-beta during embryonic tissue interactions is likely to be the enhanced synthesis of chondroitin sulfate chains on this cell surface proteoglycan.  相似文献   

4.
Keratinocyte growth factor (KGF) is an unusual fibroblast growth factor (FGF) family member in that its activity is largely restricted to epithelial cells, and added heparin/heparan sulfate inhibits its activity in most cell types. The effects of heparan sulfate proteoglycan (HSPG) on binding and signaling by acidic FGF (aFGF) and KGF via the KGFR were studied using surface-bound and soluble receptor isoforms expressed in wild type and mutant Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells lacking HSPG. Low concentrations of added heparin (1 microgram/mL) enhanced the affinity of ligand binding to surface-bound KGFR in CHO mutants, as well as ligand-stimulated MAP kinase activation and c-fos induction, but had little effect on binding or signaling in wild type CHO cells. Higher heparin concentrations inhibited KGF, but not aFGF, binding and signaling. In addition to the known interaction between HSPG and KGF, we found that the KGFR also bound heparin. The biphasic effect of heparin on KGF, but not aFGF, binding and signaling suggests that occupancy of the HSPG binding site on the KGFR may specifically inhibit KGF signaling. In contrast to events on the cell surface, added heparin was not required for high-affinity soluble KGF-KGFR interaction. These results suggest that high-affinity ligand binding is an intrinsic property of the receptor, and that the difference between the HSPG-dependent ligand binding to receptor on cell surfaces and the HSPG-independent binding to soluble receptor may be due to other molecule(s) present on cell surfaces.  相似文献   

5.
Differentiating B lymphocytes undergo changes in cell-cell and cell-matrix adhesion that control their movement through a series of distinct microenvironments. The integral membrane proteoglycan, syndecan, is a candidate for mediating B lymphocyte-matrix interactions because it is expressed on B lymphocytes only at times when they associate with matrix, and because syndecan is known to behave as a matrix receptor on simple epithelia. However, syndecan from B lymphocytes is significantly smaller in molecular mass than syndecan from simple epithelia (85 vs 160 kDa) suggesting that syndecan may have distinct functions on these two cell types. Our study was undertaken to determine if syndecan mediates adhesion of B lineage cells to extracellular matrix. The murine myeloma cell line MPC-11 was used because syndecan is the only major heparan sulfate proteoglycan detected on these cells and because they express a form of syndecan almost identical to that found on normal B lymphocytes. Cell binding assays demonstrate that syndecan binds MPC-11 cells to type I collagen. Binding is inhibited by heparin, by pretreatment of cells with heparitinase or by growth of cells before the assay in chlorate, an inhibitor of sulfation. Solid phase assays show that syndecan purified from MPC-11 cells binds to type I collagen but not type IV collagen, laminin, or fibronectin. The interaction of MPC-11-derived syndecan with type I collagen is of relatively high affinity (Kd app = 143 nM) as measured by affinity coelectrophoresis. However, the 160-kDa form of syndecan isolated from epithelial cells has a greater than fourfold higher affinity for type I collagen (Kd app = 31 nM) than does the MPC-11 syndecan, suggesting that different molecular forms of syndecan have distinct ligand binding properties. These results demonstrate that syndecan can mediate B lymphocyte interactions with matrix and suggest that changes in syndecan expression during B cell differentiation are a mechanism for controlling B cell localization within specific microenvironments.  相似文献   

6.
The present study provides direct evidence that syndecan 2 participates selectively in the induction of stress fiber formation in cooperation with integrin alpha5beta1 through specific binding of its heparan sulfate side chains to the fibronectin substrate. Our previous study with Lewis lung carcinoma-derived P29 cells demonstrated that the cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycan, which binds to fibronectin, is syndecan 2 (N. Itano et al., 1996, Biochem. J. 315, 925-930). We here report that in vitro treatment of the cells by antisense oligonucleotide for syndecan 2 resulted in a failure to form stress fibers on fibronectin substrate in association with specific suppression of its cell surface expression. Instead, localization of actin filaments in the cytoplasmic cortex occurred. A similar response of the cells was observed when the cells were treated to eliminate functions of cell surface heparan sulfates, including exogenous addition of heparin and pretreatment with anti-heparan sulfate antibody, F58-10E4, and with proteinase-free heparitinase I. Size- and structure-defined oligosaccharides prepared from heparin and chemically modified heparins were utilized as competitive inhibitors to examine the structural characteristics of the cell surface heparan sulfates involved in organization of the actin cytoskeleton. Their affinity chromatography on a column linked with a recombinant H-271 peptide containing a C-terminal heparin-binding domain of fibronectin demonstrated that 2-O-sulfated iduronates were essential for the binding. Inhibition studies revealed that a heparin-derived dodecasaccharide sample enriched with an IdoA(2OS)-GlcNS(6OS) disaccharide completely blocked binding of the syndecan 2 ectodomain to immobilized H-271 peptide. Finally, the dodecasaccharide sample was shown to inhibit stress fiber formation, triggered by adhesion of P29 cells to a CH-271 polypeptide consisting of both the RGD cell-binding and the C-terminal heparin-binding domains of fibronectin in a fused form. All these results consistently suggest that syndecan 2 proteoglycan interacts with the C-terminal heparin-binding domain of fibronectin at the highly sulfated cluster(s), such as [IdoA(2OS)-GlcNS(6OS)](6) present in its heparan sulfate chains, to result in the induction of stress fiber formation in cooperation with integrin alpha5beta1.  相似文献   

7.
A class of high-affinity binding sites that preferentially bind heparin/heparan sulfate have been identified on the external surfaces of mouse uterine epithelial cells cultured in vitro. [3H]Heparin binding to these surfaces was time-dependent, saturable, and was blocked specifically by the inclusion of unlabeled heparin or endogenous heparan sulfate in the incubation medium. A variety of other glycosaminoglycans did not compete for these binding sites. The presence of sulfate on heparin influenced, but was not essential for, recognition of the polysaccharide by the cell surface binding sites. [3H]-Heparin bound to the cell surface was displaceable by unlabeled heparin, but not chondroitin sulfate. Treatment of intact cells on ice with trypsin markedly reduced [3H]heparin binding, indicating that a large fraction of the surface binding sites were associated with proteins. Scatchard analyses revealed a class of externally disposed binding sites for heparin/heparan sulfate exhibiting an apparent Kd of approximately 50 nM and present at a level of 1.3 x 10(6) sites per cell. Approximately 9-14% of the binding sites were detectable at the apical surface of cells cultured under polarized conditions in vitro. Detachment of cells from the substratum with EDTA stimulated [3H]heparin binding to cell surfaces. These observations suggested that most of the binding sites were basally distributed and were not primarily associated with the extracellular matrix. Collectively, these observations indicate that specific interactions with heparin/heparan sulfate containing molecules can take place at both the apical and basal cell surfaces of uterine epithelial cells. This may have important consequences with regard to embryo-uterine and epithelial-basal lamina interactions.  相似文献   

8.
Exosomes regulate cell behavior by binding to and delivering their cargo to target cells; however, the mechanisms mediating exosome-cell interactions are poorly understood. Heparan sulfates on target cell surfaces can act as receptors for exosome uptake, but the ligand for heparan sulfate on exosomes has not been identified. Using exosomes isolated from myeloma cell lines and from myeloma patients, we identify exosomal fibronectin as a key heparan sulfate-binding ligand and mediator of exosome-cell interactions. We discovered that heparan sulfate plays a dual role in exosome-cell interaction; heparan sulfate on exosomes captures fibronectin, and on target cells it acts as a receptor for fibronectin. Removal of heparan sulfate from the exosome surface releases fibronectin and dramatically inhibits exosome-target cell interaction. Antibody specific for the Hep-II heparin-binding domain of fibronectin blocks exosome interaction with tumor cells or with marrow stromal cells. Regarding exosome function, fibronectin-mediated binding of exosomes to myeloma cells activated p38 and pERK signaling and expression of downstream target genes DKK1 and MMP-9, two molecules that promote myeloma progression. Antibody against fibronectin inhibited the ability of myeloma-derived exosomes to stimulate endothelial cell invasion. Heparin or heparin mimetics including Roneparstat, a modified heparin in phase I trials in myeloma patients, significantly inhibited exosome-cell interactions. These studies provide the first evidence that fibronectin binding to heparan sulfate mediates exosome-cell interactions, revealing a fundamental mechanism important for exosome-mediated cross-talk within tumor microenvironments. Moreover, these results imply that therapeutic disruption of fibronectin-heparan sulfate interactions will negatively impact myeloma tumor growth and progression.  相似文献   

9.
Thy-1 is a major brain cell surface glycoprotein of adult mammal species also expressed in rodent thymus. Despite extensive studies, the function(s) of this molecule has remained so far ill defined. We have recently shown that Thy-1 was involved in the adhesion of mouse thymocytes to thymic epithelium through a specific interaction with a heterophilic ligand(s) expressed on the epithelial cell surface. In the present study, we aimed at evaluating the interaction of sulfated glycans with mouse Thy-1, as well as its consequence on Thy-1-mediated thymic lympho-epithelial cell interaction. It was shown that 125I-labeled Thy-1 directly bound to immobilized heparin. Sulfated glycans such as pentosan sulfate, dextran sulfate, and fucoidan were found to strongly inhibit the binding of Thy-1 to heparin. In contrast, chondroitin sulfate, keratan sulfate, and heparan sulfate were not inhibitory. Sulfated glycans (e.g., pentosan sulfate, assayed at a concentration of 50 micrograms/ml) completely blocked the Thy-1-dependent adhesion of T cells to a mouse thymic epithelial cell monolayer. To explore the mechanism of this inhibition, we compared the ability of T cell to adhere to mouse thymic epithelial cell monolayer or to sulfated glycans. Our results suggest that sulfated glycans bind to a Thy-1 site distinct from that with which this molecule interacts with its heterophilic ligand. Moreover, sulfate glycans could modulate the binding of rat mAb directed at spatially distinct Thy-1 epitopes. The present results identified a potential mechanism regulating Thy-1-mediated lympho-epithelial cell adhesion.  相似文献   

10.
The proteoglycan (PG) on the surface of NMuMG mouse mammary epithelial cells consists of at least two functional domains, a membrane- intercalated domain which anchors the PG to the plasma membrane, and a trypsin-releasable ectodomain which bears both heparan and chondroitin sulfate chains. The ectodomain binds cells to collagen types I, III, and V, but not IV, and has been proposed to be a matrix receptor. Because heparin binds to the adhesive glycoproteins fibronectin, an interstitial matrix component, and laminin, a basal lamina component, we asked whether the cell surface PG also binds these molecules. Cells harvested with either trypsin or EDTA bound to fibronectin; binding of trypsin-released cells was inhibited by the peptide GRGDS but not by heparin, whereas binding of EDTA-released cells was inhibited only by a combination of GRDS and heparin, suggesting two distinct cell binding mechanisms. In the presence of GRGDS, the EDTA-released cells bound to fibronectin via the cell surface PG. Binding via the cell surface PG was to the COOH-terminal heparin binding domain of fibronectin. In contrast with the binding to fibronectin, EDTA-released cells did not bind to laminin under identical assay conditions. Liposomes containing the isolated intact cell surface PG mimic the binding of whole cells. These results indicate that the mammary epithelial cells have at least two distinct cell surface receptors for fibronectin: a trypsin- resistant molecule that binds cells to the sequence RGD and a trypsin- labile, heparan sulfate-rich PG that binds cells to the COOH-terminal heparin binding domain. Because the cell surface PG binds cells to the interstitial collagens (types I, III, and V) and to fibronectin, but not to basal lamina collagen (type IV) or laminin, we conclude that the cell surface PG is a receptor on epithelial cells specific for interstitial matrix components.  相似文献   

11.
Fannon M  Forsten KE  Nugent MA 《Biochemistry》2000,39(6):1434-1445
Basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) binds to cell surface tyrosine kinase receptor proteins and to heparan sulfate proteoglycans. The interaction of bFGF with heparan sulfate on the cell surface has been demonstrated to impact receptor binding and biological activity. bFGF receptor binding affinity is reduced on cells that do not express heparan sulfate. The addition of soluble heparin or heparan sulfate has been demonstrated to rescue the bFGF receptor binding affinity on heparan sulfate deficient cells yet has also been shown to inhibit binding under some conditions. While the chemical requirements of the heparin-bFGF-receptor interactions have been studied in detail, the possibility that heparin enhances bFGF binding in part by physically associating with the cell surface has not been fully evaluated. In the study presented here, we have investigated the possibility that heparin binding to the cell surface might play a role in modulating bFGF receptor binding and activity. Balb/c3T3 cells were treated with various concentrations of sodium chlorate, so as to express a range of endogenous heparan sulfate sites, and [(125)I]bFGF binding was assessed in the presence of a range of heparin concentrations. Low concentrations of heparin (0.1-30 nM) enhanced bFGF receptor binding to an extent that was inversely proportional to the amount of endogenous heparan sulfate sites present. At high concentrations (10 microM), heparin inhibited bFGF receptor binding in cells under all conditions. The ability of heparin to stimulate and inhibit bFGF-receptor binding correlated with altered bFGF-stimulated tyrosine kinase activity and cell proliferation. Under control and chlorate-treated conditions, [(125) I]heparin was observed to bind with a high affinity to a large number of binding sites on the cells (K(d) = 57 and 50 nM with 3.5 x 10(6) and 3.6 x 10(6) sites/cell for control and chlorate-treated cells, respectively). A mathematical model of this process revealed that the dual functions of heparin in bFGF binding were accurately represented by heparin cell binding-mediated stimulation and soluble heparin-mediated inhibition of bFGF receptor binding.  相似文献   

12.
Heparan sulfate chains of syndecan-1 regulate ectodomain shedding   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Matrix metalloproteinases release intact syndecan-1 ectodomains from the cell surface giving rise to a soluble, shed form of the proteoglycan. Although it is known that shed syndecan-1 controls diverse pathophysiological responses in cancer, wound healing, inflammation, infection, and immunity, the mechanisms regulating shedding remain unclear. We have discovered that the heparan sulfate chains present on syndecan core proteins suppress shedding of the proteoglycan. Syndecan shedding is dramatically enhanced when the heparan sulfate chains are enzymatically degraded or absent from the core protein. Exogenous heparan sulfate or heparin does not inhibit shedding, indicating that heparan sulfate must be attached to the core protein to suppress shedding. Regulation of shedding by heparan sulfate occurs in multiple cell types, for both syndecan-1 and syndecan-4 and in murine and human syndecans. Mechanistically, the loss of heparan sulfate enhances the susceptibility of the core protein to proteolytic cleavage by matrix metalloproteinases. Enhanced shedding of syndecan-1 following loss of heparan sulfate is accompanied by a dramatic increase in core protein synthesis. This suggests that in response to an increase in the rate of shedding, cells attempt to maintain a significant level of syndecan-1 on the cell surface. Together these data indicate that the amount of heparan sulfate present on syndecan core proteins regulates both the rate of syndecan shedding and core protein synthesis. These findings assign new functions to heparan sulfate chains, thereby broadening our understanding of their physiological importance and implying that therapeutic inhibition of heparan sulfate degradation could impact the progression of some diseases.  相似文献   

13.
NKp30 is a natural cytotoxicity receptor expressed by human NK cells and involved in NK lytic activity. We previously published that membranal heparan sulfate serves as a coligand for human NKp30. In the present study, we complement our results by showing direct binding of recombinant NKp30 to immobilized heparin. The heparan sulfate epitope(s) on target tumor cells and the heparin epitope(s) recognized by NKp30 share similar characteristics. Warren and colleagues (Warren HS, Jones AL, Freeman C, Bettadapura J, Parish CR. 2005. Evidence that the cellular ligand for the human NK cell activation receptor NKp30 is not a heparan sulfate glycosaminoglycan. J Immunol. 175:207-212) published that NKp30 does not bind to membranal heparan sulfate on target cells and that heparan sulfate is not involved in NKp30-mediated lysis. In the current study, we examine the binding of six different recombinant NKp30s to membranal heparan sulfate and conclude that NKp30 does interact with membranal heparan sulfate. Yet, two of the six recombinant NKp30s, including the commercially available recombinant NKp30 (employed by Warren et al.) did not show heparan sulfate-dependent binding. We demonstrate that this is due to an altered glycosylation of these two recombinant NKp30s. Upon removal of its N-linked glycans, heparan sulfate-dependent binding to tumor cells and direct binding to heparin were restored. Overall, our results emphasize the importance of proper glycosylation for analysis of NKp30 binding to its ligand and that membranal heparan sulfate could serve as a coligand for NKp30. At the cellular level, soluble heparan sulfate enhanced the secretion of IFNgamma by NK-92 natural killer cells activated with anti-NKp30 monoclonal antibody. We discuss the involvement of heparan sulfate binding to NKp30 in NKp30-mediated activation of NK cells.  相似文献   

14.
Promotion of cell growth and differentiation by growth factors during early development and organ formation are both temporally and spatially very precise. Syndecan is a well characterized integral membrane proteoglycan that binds several extracellular matrix components via its heparan sulfate chains and is therefore suggested to participate in cell regulation. Syndecan-like molecules, as low affinity receptors for heparin-binding growth factors, have been recently suggested to also regulate growth factor activity. Heparin/heparan sulfate interaction is required before, e.g. basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) can associate with its high affinity cell surface receptors and trigger signal transduction. In this paper we show that syndecan, but not free heparan sulfate chains, can simultaneously bind both bFGF and extracellular matrix molecules. Moreover, increased DNA synthesis of 3T3 cells was observed when the 3T3 cells were exposed to beads coated with the fibronectin-syndecan-bFGF complex, indicating that bFGF remains biologically active even when immobilized to matrix via the heparan sulfate chains of syndecan. Finally, when bFGF was bound to the surface of another cell type (epithelial), co-culture with 3T3 cells stimulated 3T3 cell growth. Therefore, we suggest that syndecan-like molecules may determine sites of growth factor action at cell-matrix and cell-cell interfaces.  相似文献   

15.
Binding of Sindbis Virus to Cell Surface Heparan Sulfate   总被引:13,自引:10,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
Alphaviruses are arthropod-borne viruses with wide species ranges and diverse tissue tropisms. The cell surface receptors which allow infection of so many different species and cell types are still incompletely characterized. We show here that the widely expressed glycosaminoglycan heparan sulfate can participate in the binding of Sindbis virus to cells. Enzymatic removal of heparan sulfate or the use of heparan sulfate-deficient cells led to a large reduction in virus binding. Sindbis virus bound to immobilized heparin, and this interaction was blocked by neutralizing antibodies against the viral E2 glycoprotein. Further experiments showed that a high degree of sulfation was critical for the ability of heparin to bind Sindbis virus. However, Sindbis virus was still able to infect and replicate on cells which were completely deficient in heparan sulfate, indicating that additional receptors must be involved. Cell surface binding of another alphavirus, Ross River virus, was found to be independent of heparan sulfate.  相似文献   

16.
The present study provides direct evidence that syndecan 2 participates selectively in the induction of stress fiber formation in cooperation with integrin α5β1 through specific binding of its heparan sulfate side chains to the fibronectin substrate. Our previous study with Lewis lung carcinoma-derived P29 cells demonstrated that the cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycan, which binds to fibronectin, is syndecan 2 (N. Itano et al., 1996, Biochem. J. 315, 925–930). We here report that in vitro treatment of the cells by antisense oligonucleotide for syndecan 2 resulted in a failure to form stress fibers on fibronectin substrate in association with specific suppression of its cell surface expression. Instead, localization of actin filaments in the cytoplasmic cortex occurred. A similar response of the cells was observed when the cells were treated to eliminate functions of cell surface heparan sulfates, including exogenous addition of heparin and pretreatment with anti-heparan sulfate antibody, F58-10E4, and with proteinase-free heparitinase I. Size- and structure-defined oligosaccharides prepared from heparin and chemically modified heparins were utilized as competitive inhibitors to examine the structural characteristics of the cell surface heparan sulfates involved in organization of the actin cytoskeleton. Their affinity chromatography on a column linked with a recombinant H-271 peptide containing a C-terminal heparin-binding domain of fibronectin demonstrated that 2-O-sulfated iduronates were essential for the binding. Inhibition studies revealed that a heparin-derived dodecasaccharide sample enriched with an IdoA(2OS)–GlcNS(6OS) disaccharide completely blocked binding of the syndecan 2 ectodomain to immobilized H-271 peptide. Finally, the dodecasaccharide sample was shown to inhibit stress fiber formation, triggered by adhesion of P29 cells to a CH-271 polypeptide consisting of both the RGD cell-binding and the C-terminal heparin-binding domains of fibronectin in a fused form. All these results consistently suggest that syndecan 2 proteoglycan interacts with the C-terminal heparin-binding domain of fibronectin at the highly sulfated cluster(s), such as [IdoA(2OS)–GlcNS(6OS)]6 present in its heparan sulfate chains, to result in the induction of stress fiber formation in cooperation with integrin α5β1.  相似文献   

17.
NKp44 is a natural cytotoxicity receptor expressed by human NK cells upon activation. In this study, we demonstrate that cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGs), expressed by target cells, are involved in the recognition of tumor cells by NKp44. NKp44 showed heparan sulfate-dependent binding to tumor cells; this binding was partially blocked with an antibody to heparan sulfate. In addition, direct binding of NKp44 to heparin was observed, and soluble heparin/heparan sulfate enhanced the secretion of IFNgamma by NK92 cells activated with anti-NKp44 monoclonal antibody. Basic amino acids, predicted to constitute the putative heparin/heparan sulfate binding site of NKp44, were mutated. Tumor cell recognition of the mutated NKp44 proteins was significantly reduced and correlated with their lower recognition of heparin. We previously reported that NKp44 recognizes the hemagglutinin of influenza virus (IV). Nevertheless, the ability of the mutated NKp44 proteins to bind viral hemagglutinin expressed by IV-infected cells was not affected. Thus, we suggest that heparan sulfate epitope(s) are ligands/co-ligands of NKp44 and are involved in its tumor recognition ability.  相似文献   

18.
The subcellular localization of human skin chymase to mast cell granules was established by immunoelectron microscopy, and binding of chymase to the area of the dermo-epidermal junction, a basement membrane, was demonstrated immunocytochemically in cryosections incubated with purified proteinase prior to immunolabeling. Because heparin and heparan sulfate proteoglycans are major constituents of mast cell granules and basement membranes, respectively, the ability of chymase to bind to glycosaminoglycans (GAG) was investigated. Among a variety of GAGs, only binding of chymase to heparin and heparan sulfate appears physiologically significant. Binding was ionic strength-dependent, involved amino groups on the proteinase, and correlated with increasing GAG sulfate content, indicating a predominantly electrostatic association. Interaction with heparin was observed in solutions containing up to 0.5 M NaCl, and interaction with heparan sulfate was observed in solutions containing up to 0.3 M NaCl. Binding of heparin did not detectably affect catalysis of peptide substrates, but may reduce accessibility of proteinase to protein substrates. Measurements among a series of serine class proteinases indicated that heparin binding was a more common property of mast cell proteinases than proteinases stored in other secretory granules. Binding of chymase to heparin is likely to have a storage as well as a structural role within the mast cell granule, whereas binding of chymase to heparan sulfate may have physiological significance after degranulation.  相似文献   

19.
The androgen-induced proliferation of S115 mouse mammary tumor cells has been suggested to involve autocrinic fibroblast growth factor signaling. Heparan sulfate proteoglycans are required for fibroblast growth factor signaling, presumably due to their ability to alter binding of fibroblast growth factors to their receptors. We have investigated the role of heparan sulfate proteoglycans in the testosterone-induced proliferation of S115 cells. We demonstrate that when the cells are treated with sodium chlorate, which inhibits the sulfation of endogenous heparan sulfate proteoglycans, cell growth becomes dependent on exogenous heparin. The shortest heparin oligosaccharides supporting cell growth were octasaccharides, whereas dodecasaccharides were almost as effective as native heparin. The N-, 2-O-, and 6-O-sulfate groups of heparin were all required for full testosterone response. Treatment of S115 cells with chlorate or testosterone did not alter the expression of fibroblast growth factor receptors 1 or 3, whereas the expression of fibroblast growth factor receptor 2 was down-regulated. We have previously shown that overexpression of syndecan-1 heparan sulfate proteoglycan renders S115 cells insensitive to testosterone and now demonstrate that this effect can be overcome by sodium chlorate treatment in combination with exogenous heparin. Our results suggest that heparin-like molecules are intimately involved in the androgen-mediated proliferation of S115 cells.  相似文献   

20.
Receptor-ligand interactions between APCs and T cells determine whether stimulation of the latter leads to activation or inhibition. Previously, we showed that dendritic cell-associated heparin sulfate proteoglycan-dependent integrin ligand (DC-HIL) on APC can inhibit T cell activation by binding an unknown ligand expressed on activated T cells. Because DC-HIL binds heparin/heparan sulfate and heparin blocks the inhibitory function of DC-HIL, we hypothesized that a heparin/heparan sulfate proteoglycan on activated T cells is the relevant ligand. Screening assays revealed that syndecan-4 (SD-4) is the sole heparan sulfate proteoglycan immunoprecipitated by DC-HIL from extracts of activated T cells and that blocking SD-4 abrogates binding of DC-HIL to activated T cells. Moreover, cell-bound SD-4 ligated by DC-HIL or cross-linked by anti-SD-4 Ab attenuated anti-CD3 responses, whereas knocked-down SD-4 expression led to enhanced T cell response to APC. Blockade of endogenous SD-4 using specific Ab or soluble SD-4 receptor led to augmented T cell reactions to syngeneic and allogeneic stimulation in vitro and exacerbated contact hypersensitivity responses in vivo. We conclude that SD-4 is the T cell ligand through which DC-HIL mediates its negative coregulatory function.  相似文献   

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