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1.
Basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) binds to cell surface receptors and to heparin sulfate proteoglycans. Heparan sulfate binding may limit bFGF degradation and be an obligatory step for bFGF cell interaction. Transforming growth factor-beta 1 (TGF-beta 1) is a potent regulator of proteoglycan production and composition. The possibility that TGF-beta 1 synergistically regulates bFGF activity by altering bFGF-proteoglycan interactions was investigated. TGF-beta 1 increased 125I-bFGF binding to the extracellular matrix (ECM) of Balb/c3T3 cells 2-4-fold by increasing the number of bFGF binding sites. Increased bFGF binding correlated with a 2-5-fold increase in the production of sulfated proteoglycans, including heparan sulfate proteoglycans. TGF-beta 1 selectively stimulated production of high molecular mass proteoglycans (190-300 kDa) in conditioned medium and stimulated all proteoglycans in ECM. 125I-bFGF bound to TGF-beta 1 induced proteoglycans immobilized onto cationic nylon filters. Furthermore, ECM isolated from TGF-beta 1-treated cells incorporated more mitogenically active bFGF than native ECM. The mitogenic potential of the ECM was significantly reduced by treatment with heparinase. These results suggest that the ability of TGF-beta 1 to stimulate binding of bFGF to ECM, increase ECM heparan sulfate proteoglycan, and potentiate the mitogenic activity of bFGF are linked. Thus one aspect of TGF-beta 1/bFGF synergy may involve modulation of the ECM.  相似文献   

2.
Latent transforming growth factor-beta-binding proteins (LTBPs) are extracellular matrix (ECM) glycoproteins that play a major role in the storage of latent TGF beta in the ECM and regulate its availability. Here we show that fibronectin is critical for the incorporation of LTBP1 and transforming growth factor-beta (TGF beta) into the ECM of osteoblasts and fibroblasts. Immunolocalization studies suggested that fibronectin provides an initial scaffold that precedes and patterns LTBP1 deposition but that LTBP1 and fibronectin are later localized in separate fibrillar networks, suggesting that the initial template is lost. Treatment of fetal rat calvarial osteoblasts with a 70-kDa N-terminal fibronectin fragment that inhibits fibronectin assembly impaired incorporation of LTBP1 and TGFbeta into the ECM. Consistent with this, LTBP1 failed to assemble in embryonic fibroblasts that lack the gene for fibronectin. LTBP1 assembly was rescued by full-length fibronectin and superfibronectin, which are capable of assembly into fibronectin fibrils, but not by other fibronectin fragments, including a 160-kDa RGD-containing fragment that activates alpha5beta1 integrins. This suggests that the critical event for LTBP1 assembly is the formation of a fibronectin fibrillar network and that integrin ligation by fibronectin molecules alone is not sufficient. Not only was fibronectin essential for the initial incorporation of LTBP1 into the ECM, but the continued presence of fibronectin was required for the continued assembly of LTBP1. These studies highlight a nonredundant role for fibronectin in LTBP1 assembly into the ECM and suggest a novel role for fibronectin in regulation of TGF beta via LTBP1 interactions.  相似文献   

3.
The components of the extracellular matrix (ECM) and their differential expression patterns play important roles in tissue formation. The deposition of latent TGF‐β binding proteins (LTBPs) to the ECM exhibit distinct distribution profiles. We have analyzed here the temporal and spatial ECM association of latent TGF‐β binding protein LTBP‐2 in cultured human embryonic lung fibroblasts. We found that LTBP‐2 was not assembled to the ECM until by confluency of cultures following the deposition of fibronectin (FN) and fibrillin‐1. In 5‐day‐old cultures LTBP‐2 was rapidly secreted from cells and it subsequently associated with the ECM as shown by metabolic labeling and immunoprecipitation. LTBP‐2 colocalized transiently with fibronectin and failed to assemble to the ECM of FN deficient mouse fibroblasts. Analysis of different cultured human cell lines revealed partial colocalization of LTBP‐2 and fibrillin‐1 in the ECM of fibroblasts, MG‐63 osteosarcoma cells and human vascular endothelial cells. Silencing of fibrillin‐1 expression by lentiviral shRNAs profoundly disrupted the deposition of LTBP‐2. Current results suggest that LTBP‐2 is not an element of the provisional ECM of fibroblasts but is more likely a component of more mature ECM and indicate that matrix association of LTBP‐2 depends on a pre‐formed fibrillin‐1 network. J. Cell. Physiol. 221: 586–593, 2009. © 2009 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

4.
The involvement of embryonic cell surface proteoglycans in the attachment and outgrowth of cultured mouse embryos has been investigated. Several lines of evidence indicate that periimplantation stage blastocysts express heparin/heparan sulfate proteoglycans on their cell surfaces that can mediate embryo attachment and trophoblast outgrowth on a variety of matrices. First, in the presence of soluble heparin, the rate at which embryos attach and outgrow on laminin, fibronectin, or monolayers of uterine epithelial cells is reduced considerably. In the case of fibronectin, the rate of outgrowth in the presence of the heparin is slower than in the presence of the Arg-Gly-Asp-Ser-containing peptide that is recognized by a fibronectin receptor. Embryos also attach and exhibit a limited ability to outgrow on platelet factor IV, a heparin binding protein that does not possess the additional binding domains of laminin or fibronectin. Attachment on platelet factor IV is inhibited by heparin. Second, cell surface digestion of attachment-component embryos with heparinase, but not chondroitinase ABC, slows the rate of outgrowth on tissue culture plates in the presence of serum. Third, selective staining for sulfated molecules on the trophectoderm surface of periimplantation stage embryos indicates that such molecules are abundant and uniformly distributed on these cell surfaces. Last, heparin/heparan sulfate proteoglycans are detected as major cell surface components of embryos using vectorial labeling with lactoperoxidase and Na125I. Collectively, these data indicate that heparin/heparan sulfate-bearing molecules have a direct role in attachment and outgrowth of implantation stage blastocysts.  相似文献   

5.
Fibrillin-1 N- and C-terminal heparin binding sites have been characterized. An unprocessed monomeric N-terminal fragment (PF1) induced a very high heparin binding response, indicating heparin-mediated multimerization. Using PF1 deletion and short fragments, a heparin binding site was localized within the domain encoded by exon 7 after the first hybrid domain. Rodent embryonic fibroblasts adhered to PF1 and deletion fragments, and, when cells were plated on fibrillin-1 or fibronectin Arg-Gly-Asp cell-binding fragments, cells showed heparin-dependent spreading and focal contact formation in response to soluble PF1. Within domains encoded by exons 59-62 near the fibrillin-1 C terminus are novel conformation-dependent high affinity heparin and tropoelastin binding sites. Heparin disrupted tropoelastin binding but did not disrupt N- and C-terminal fibrillin-1 interactions. Thus, fibrillin-1 N-terminal interactions with heparin/heparan sulfate directly influence cell behavior, whereas C-terminal interactions with heparin/heparan sulfate regulate elastin deposition. These data highlight how heparin/heparan sulfate controls fibrillin-1 interactions.  相似文献   

6.
Hypoxia is one of the major signals that induces angiogenesis. Hypoxic conditions lead to reduced extracellular pH. Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) binding to endothelial cells and the extracellular matrix (ECM) increases at acidic pH (7.0-5.5). These interactions are dependent on heparan sulfate proteoglycans, but do not depend on the presence of VEGF receptors. Here we report that VEGF(165) and VEGF(121) binding to fibronectin also increased at acidic pH, and that these interactions are further enhanced by the addition of heparin. These results reveal that the accepted non-heparin-binding isoform of VEGF (VEGF(121)) is converted into a heparin-binding growth factor under acidic conditions. Interestingly, we did not observe increased binding of VEGF to collagen type I at acidic pH in the presence or absence of heparin, indicating that this effect is not a general property of all heparin-binding ECM proteins. The high level of VEGF binding at acidic pH was also rapidly reversed as demonstrated by increased rates of VEGF dissociation from fibronectin and fibronectin-heparin matrices as the pH was raised. The VEGF released from fibronectin retained its ability to stimulate the activation of extracellular-regulated kinase 1/2 in endothelial cells. These results suggest that VEGF may be stored in the extracellular matrix via interactions with fibronectin and heparan sulfate in tissues that are in need of vascularization so that it can aid in directing the dynamic process of growth and migration of new blood vessels.  相似文献   

7.
The binding of growth factors to the extracellular matrix (ECM) may be a key pathway for regulation of their activity. We have shown that a major mechanism for storage of transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) in bone ECM is via its association with latent TGF-beta-binding protein-1 (LTBP1). Although proteolytic cleavage of LTBP1 has been reported, it remains unclear whether this represents a physiological mechanism for release of matrix-bound TGF-beta. Here we examined the role of LTBP1 in cell-mediated release of TGF-beta from bone ECM. We first characterized the soluble and ECM-bound forms of latent TGF-beta produced by primary osteoblasts. Next, we examined release of ECM-bound TGF-beta by bone resorbing cells. Isolated avian osteoclasts and rabbit bone marrow-derived osteoclasts released bone matrix-bound TGF-beta via LTBP1 cleavage. 1,25-Dihydroxyvitamin D3 enhanced LTBP1 cleavage, resulting in release of 90% of the ECM-bound LTBP1. In contrast, osteoblasts failed to cleave LTBP1 or release TGF-beta from bone ECM. Cleavage of LTBP1 by avian osteoclasts was inhibited by serine protease and metalloproteinase (MMP) inhibitors. Studies using purified proteases showed that plasmin, elastase, MMP2, and MMP9 were able to cleave LTBP1 to produce 125-165-kDa fragments. These studies identify LTBP1 as a novel substrate for MMPs and provide the first demonstration that LTBP1 proteolysis may be a physiological mechanism for release of TGF-beta from ECM-bound stores, potentially the first step in the pathway by which matrix-bound TGF-beta is rendered active.  相似文献   

8.
Evidence suggests that endothelial cell layer heparan sulfate proteoglycans include a variety of different sized molecules which most likely contain different protein cores. In the present report, approximately half of endothelial cell surface associated heparan sulfate proteoglycan is shown to be releasable with soluble heparin. The remaining cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycan, as well as extracellular matrix heparan sulfate proteoglycan, cannot be removed from the cells with heparin. The heparin nonreleasable cell surface proteoglycan can be released by membrane disrupting agents and is able to intercalate into liposomes. When the heparin releasable and nonreleasable cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans are compared, differences in proteoglycan size are also evident. Furthermore, the intact heparin releasable heparan sulfate proteoglycan is closer in size to proteoglycans isolated from the extracellular matrix and from growth medium than to that which is heparin nonreleasable. These data indicate that cultured porcine aortic endothelial cells contain at least two distinct types of cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans, one of which appears to be associated with the cells through its glycosaminoglycan chains. The other (which is more tightly associated) is probably linked via a membrane intercalated protein core.Abbreviations ECM extracellular matrix - HSPG heparan sulfate proteoglycan - PAE porcine aortic endothelial - PBS phosphate buffered saline  相似文献   

9.
Transforming growth factor-betas (TGF-beta) are secreted as inactive complexes containing the TGF-beta, the TGF-beta propeptide, also called the latency-associated protein (LAP), and the latent TGF-beta binding protein (LTBP). Extracellular activation of this complex is a critical but incompletely understood step in TGF-beta regulation. We have investigated the role of LTBP in modulating TGF-beta generation by the integrin alphaVbeta6. We show that even though alphavbeta6 recognizes an RGD on LAP, LTBP-1 is required for alphaVbeta6-mediated latent TGF-beta activation. The domains of LTBP-1 necessary for activation include the TGF-beta propeptide-binding domain and a basic amino acid sequence (hinge domain) with ECM targeting properties. Our results demonstrate an LTBP-1 isoform-specific function in alphaVbeta6-mediated latent TGF-beta activation; LTBP-3 is unable to substitute for LTBP-1 in this assay. The results reveal a functional role for LTBP-1 in latent TGF-beta activation and suggest that activation of specific latent complexes is regulated by distinct mechanisms that may be determined by the LTBP isoform and its potential interaction with the matrix.  相似文献   

10.
《The Journal of cell biology》1993,120(4):995-1002
Transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta) is released from cells in a latent form consisting of the mature growth factor associated with an aminoterminal propeptide and latent TGF-beta binding protein (LTBP). The endogenous activation of latent TGF-beta has been described in co- cultures of endothelial and smooth muscle cells. However, the mechanism of this activation remains unknown. Antibodies to native platelet LTBP and to a peptide fragment of LTBP inhibit in a dose-dependent manner the activation of latent TGF-beta normally observed when endothelial cells are cocultured with smooth muscle cells. Inhibition of latent TGF- beta activation was also observed when cells were co-cultured in the presence of an excess of free LTBP. These data represent the first demonstration of a function for the LTBP in the extracellular regulation of TGF-beta activity and indicate that LTBP participates in the activation of latent TGF-beta, perhaps by concentrating the latent growth factor on the cell surface where activation occurs.  相似文献   

11.
Fibrillin-1 is a major constituent of the 10-12 nm extracellular microfibrils. Here we identify, characterize, and localize heparin/heparan sulfate-binding sites in fibrillin-1 and report on the role of such glycosaminoglycans in the assembly of fibrillin-1. By using different binding assays, we localize two calcium-independent heparin-binding sites to the N-terminal (Arg(45)-Thr(450)) and C-terminal (Asp(1528)-Arg(2731)) domains of fibrillin-1. A calcium-dependent-binding site was localized to the central (Asp(1028)-Thr(1486)) region of fibrillin-1. Heparin binding to these sites can be inhibited by a highly sulfated and iduronated form of heparan sulfate but not by chondroitin 4-sulfate, chondroitin 6-sulfate, and dermatan sulfate, demonstrating that the heparin binding regions represent binding domains for heparan sulfate. When heparin or heparan sulfate was added to cultures of skin fibroblasts, the assembly of fibrillin-1 into a microfibrillar network was significantly reduced. Western blot analysis demonstrated that this effect was not due to a reduced amount of fibrillin-1 secreted into the culture medium. Inhibition of the attachment of glycosaminoglycans to core proteins of proteoglycans by beta-d-xylosides resulted in a significant reduction of the fibrillin-1 network. These studies suggest that binding of fibrillin-1 to proteoglycan-associated heparan sulfate chains is an important step in the assembly of microfibrils.  相似文献   

12.
Proteins with affinities for specific glycosaminoglycans (GAC's) were used as probes for testing the potential of cell surface GAG's to mediate cell adhesive responses to extracellular matrices (ECM). Plasma fibronectin (FN) and proteins that bind hyaluronate (cartilage proteo-glycan core and link proteins) or heparan sulfate (platelet factor 4 [PF4]) were adsorbed to inert substrata to evaluate attachment and spreading of several 3T3 cell lines. Cells failed to attach to hyaluronate-binding substrata. The rates of attachment on PF4 were identical to those on FN; however, PF4 stimulated formation of broad convex lamellae but not tapered cell processes fibers during the spreading response. PF4-mediated responses were blocked by treating the PF4-adsorbed substratum with heparin (but not chondroitin sulfate), or alternatively the cells with Flavobacter heparinum heparinase (but not chondroitinase ABC). Heparinase treatment did not inhibit cell attachment to FN but did inhibit spreading. Cells spread on PF4 or FN contained similar Ca2+-independent cell-substratum adhesions, as revealed by EGTA-mediated retraction of their substratum-bound processes. Microtubular networks reorganized in cells on PF4 but failed to extend into the broadly spread lamellae, where fine microfilament bundles had developed. Stress fibers, common on FN, failed to develop on PF4. These experiments indicate that (a) heparan sulfate proteoglycans are critical mediators of cell adhesion and heparan sulfate-dependent adhesion via PF4 is comparable in some, but not all, ways to FN-mediated adhesion, (b) the uncharacterized and heparan sulfate-independent "cell surface" receptor for FN permits some but not all aspects of adhesion, and (c) physiologically compatible and complete adhesion of fibroblasts requires binding of extracellular matrix FN to both the unidentified "cell surface" receptor and heparan sulfate proteoglycans.  相似文献   

13.
Herndon  ME; Stipp  CS; Lander  AD 《Glycobiology》1999,9(2):143-155
The method of affinity coelectrophoresis was used to study the binding of nine representative glycosaminoglycan (GAG)-binding proteins, all thought to play roles in nervous system development, to GAGs and proteoglycans isolated from developing rat brain. Binding to heparin and non-neural heparan and chondroitin sulfates was also measured. All nine proteins-laminin-1, fibronectin, thrombospondin-1, NCAM, L1, protease nexin-1, urokinase plasminogen activator, thrombin, and fibroblast growth factor-2-bound brain heparan sulfate less strongly than heparin, but the degree of difference in affinity varied considerably. Protease nexin-1 bound brain heparan sulfate only 1.8- fold less tightly than heparin (Kdvalues of 35 vs. 20 nM, respectively), whereas NCAM and L1 bound heparin well (Kd approximately 140 nM) but failed to bind detectably to brain heparan sulfate (Kd>3 microM). Four proteins bound brain chondroitin sulfate, with affinities equal to or a few fold stronger than the same proteins displayed toward cartilage chondroitin sulfate. Overall, the highest affinities were observed with intact heparan sulfate proteoglycans: laminin-1's affinities for the proteoglycans cerebroglycan (glypican-2), glypican-1 and syndecan-3 were 300- to 1800-fold stronger than its affinity for brain heparan sulfate. In contrast, the affinities of fibroblast growth factor-2 for cerebroglycan and for brain heparan sulfate were similar. Interestingly, partial proteolysis of cerebroglycan resulted in a >400- fold loss of laminin affinity. These data support the views that (1) GAG-binding proteins can be differentially sensitive to variations in GAG structure, and (2) core proteins can have dramatic, ligand-specific influences on protein-proteoglycan interactions.   相似文献   

14.
Immunogold labeling was used to localize the core protein of small dermatan sulfate proteoglycan (DS-PG) on the surface of cultured human fibroblasts. At 4 degrees C, DS-PG core protein was uniformly distributed over the cell surface. At 37 degrees C, gold particles either became rearranged in form of clusters or remained associated with fibrils. Double-label immunocytochemistry indicated the co-distribution of DS-PG core protein and fibronectin in the fibrils. In an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, binding of DS-PG from fibroblast secretions and of its core protein to fibronectin occurred at pH 7.4 and at physiological ionic strength. Larger amounts of core protein than of intact proteoglycan could be bound. Fibronectin peptides containing either the heparin-binding domain near the COOH-terminal end or the heparin-binding NH2 terminus were the only fragments interacting with DS-PG and core protein. Competition and replacement experiments with heparin and dermatan sulfate suggested the existence of adjacent binding sites for heparin and DS-PG core protein. It is hypothesized that heparan sulfate proteoglycans and DS-PG may competitively interact with fibronectin.  相似文献   

15.
Collagen-fibronectin complexes, formed by binding of fibronectin to gelatin or collagen insolubilized on Sepharose, were found to bind 20–40% of radioactivity in [35S]heparin. Fibronectin attached directly to Sepharose also bound [35S]heparin, while gelatin-Sepharose without fibronectin did not. Unlabeled heparin and highly sulfated heparan sulfate efficiently inhibited the binding of [35S]heparin, hyaluronic acid and dermatan sulfate were slightly inhibitory, while chondroitin sulfates and heparan sulfate with a low sulfate content did not inhibit.The interaction of heparin with fibronectin bound to gelatin resulted in complexes which required higher concentrations of urea to dissociate than complexes of fibronectin and gelatin alone. Heparin as well as highly sulfated heparan sulfate and hyaluronic acid brought about agglutination of plastic beads coated with gelatin when fibronectin was present. Neither fibronectin nor glycosaminoglycans alone agglutinated the beads.It is proposed that the multiple interactions of fibronectin, collagen and glycosaminoglycans revealed in these assays could play a role in the deposition of these substances as an insoluble extracellular matrix. Alterations of the quality or quantity of any one of these components could have important effects on cell surface interactions, including the lack of cell surface fibronectin in malignant cells.  相似文献   

16.
NKp46 is a member of a group of receptors collectively termed natural cytotoxicity receptors (NCRs) that are expressed by natural killer (NK) cells. NCRs are capable of mediating direct killing of tumor and virus-infected cells by NK cells. We have recently shown that NKp46 recognizes the heparan sulfate moieties of membranal heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGs), thus enabling lysis of tumor cells by NK cells. In the current study, we further examined the residues in NKp46 that may be involved in heparan sulfate binding on tumor cells. On the basis of both the electrostatic potential map and comparison to the heparin binding site on human fibronectin, we predicted a continuous region containing the basic amino acids K133, R136, H139, R142, and K146 to be involved in NKp46 binding to heparan sulfate. Mutating these amino acids on NKp46D2 to noncharged amino acids retained its virus binding capacity but reduced its binding to tumor cells with a 10-100 fold lower K(D) when tested for direct binding to heparin. The minimal length of the heparin/heparan sulfate epitope recognized by NKp46 was eight saccharides as predicted from the structure and proven by testing heparin oligomers. Testing selectively monodesulfated heparin oligomers emphasized the specific contributions of O-sulfation, N-sulfation, and N-acetylation to epitope recognition by NKp46. The characterization of heparan sulfate binding region in NKp46 offers further insight into the identity of the ligands for NKp46 and the interaction of NK and cancers.  相似文献   

17.
Heparan sulfate and heparin, two sulfated glycosaminoglycans (GAGs), extracted collagen-tailed acetylcholinesterase (AChE) from the extracellular matrix (ECM) of the electric organ of Discopyge tschudii. The effect of heparan sulfate and heparin was abolished by protamine; other GAGs could not extract the esterase. The solubilization of the asymmetric AChE apparently occurs through the formation of a soluble AChE-GAG complex of 30S. Heparitinase treatment but not chondroitinase ABC treatment of the ECM released asymmetric AChE forms. This provides direct evidence for the vivo interaction between asymmetric AChE and heparan sulfate residues of the ECM. Biochemical analysis of the electric organ ECM showed that sulfated GAGs bound to proteoglycans account for 5% of the total basal lamina. Approximately 20% of the total GAGs were susceptible to heparitinase or nitrous acid oxidation which degrades specifically heparan sulfates, and approximately 80% were susceptible to digestion with chondroitinase ABC, which degrades chondroitin-4 and -6 sulfates and dermatan sulfate. Our experiments provide evidence that asymmetric AChE and carbohydrate components of proteoglycans are associated in the ECM; they also indicate that a heparan sulfate proteoglycan is involved in the anchorage of the collagen-tailed AChE to the synaptic basal lamina.  相似文献   

18.
Formation of nephrons from primitive mesenchyme in fetal kidneys is induced by ureteric buds. Nephron induction is closely coordinated with branching morphogenesis of the ureteric bud. Having previously shown that branching of the primitive ureter is associated with de novo synthesis of chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan and release of free heparan sulfate glycosaminoglycan chains, we asked whether glycosaminoglycans influence nephron development. Fetal mouse kidneys were incubated in organ cultures containing heparan sulfate, heparin, chondroitin sulfate, or hyaluronate. After 48 hr the number of nephrons at each developmental stage was enumerated by light microscopic analysis of serial tissue sections. Kidneys incubated in heparin or in heparan sulfate contained up to 10-fold fewer nephrons than did kidneys incubated in control conditions or in chondroitin sulfate or hyaluronic acid. Maturation of nephrons, however, was unaffected. Inhibition of nephron development was associated with binding of labeled heparin to primitive mesenchyme and altered tissue distribution of fibronectin. Branching morphogenesis was impaired in kidneys exposed to heparin but not to heparan sulfate or to de-N-sulfated, N-acetylated heparin. The capacity of glycosaminoglycans to inhibit nephron formation depended on sugar composition and O-sulfation but not GAG chain size or charge density. Thus, heparan sulfate may have the capacity to specifically control formation of nephrons in fetal metanephric kidneys in vitro.  相似文献   

19.
Summary Human platelet-derived transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) is a cell-type specific promotor of proteoglycan synthesis in human adult arterial cells. Cultured human adult arterial smooth muscle cells synthesized chondroitin sulfate, dermatan sulfate, and heparan sulfate proteoglycans, and the percent composition of these three proteoglycan subclasses varied to some extent from cell strain to cell strain. However, TGF-beta consistently stimulated the synthesis of chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan. Both chondroitin 4- and chondroitin 6-sulfate were stimulated by TGF-beta to the same extent. TGF-beta had no stimulatory effect on either class of [35S]sulfate-labeled proteoglycans which appeared in an approximately 1:1 and 2:1 ratio of heparan sulfate to dermatan sulfate of the medium and cell layers, respectively, of arterial endothelial cells. Human adult arterial endothelial cells synthesized little or no chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan. Pulse-chase labeling revealed that the appearance of smooth muscle cell proteoglycans into the medium over a 36-h period equaled the disappearance of labeled proteoglycans from the cell layer, independent of TGF-beta. Inhibitors of RNA synthesis blocked TGF-beta-stimulated proteoglycan synthesis in the smooth muscle cells. The incorporation of [35S]methionine into chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan core proteins was stimulated by TGF-beta. Taken together, the results presented indicate that TGF-beta stimulates chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan synthesis in human adult arterial smooth muscle cells by promoting the core protein synthesis. Supported in part by grants from the Public Health Service, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Washington, DC (CA 37589 and HL 33842), RJR Nabisco, Inc., and Chang Gung Biomedical Research Foundation (CMRP 291).  相似文献   

20.
The extracellular matrix of cultured human lung fibroblasts contains one major heparan sulfate proteoglycan. This proteoglycan contains a 400-kDa core protein and is structurally and immunochemically identical or closely related to the heparan sulfate proteoglycans that occur in basement membranes. Because heparitinase does not release the core protein from the matrix of cultured cells, we investigated the binding interactions of this heparan sulfate proteoglycan with other components of the fibroblast extracellular matrix. Both the intact proteoglycan and the heparitinase-resistant core protein were found to bind to fibronectin. The binding of 125I-labeled core protein to immobilized fibronectin was inhibited by soluble fibronectin and by soluble cold core protein but not by albumin or gelatin. A Scatchard plot indicates a Kd of about 2 x 10(-9) M. Binding of the core protein was also inhibited by high concentrations of heparin, heparan sulfate, or chrondroitin sulfate and was sensitive to high salt concentrations. Thermolysin fragmentation of the 125I-labeled proteoglycan yielded glycosamino-glycan-free core protein fragments of approximately 110 and 62 kDa which bound to both fibronectin and heparin columns. The core protein-binding capacity of fibronectin was very sensitive to proteolysis. Analysis of thermolytic and alpha-chymotryptic fragments of fibronectin showed binding of the intact proteoglycan and of its isolated core protein to a protease-sensitive fragment of 56 kDa which carried the gelatin-binding domain of fibronectin and to a protease-sensitive heparin-binding fragment of 140 kDa. Based on the NH2-terminal amino acid sequence analyses of the 56- and 140-kDa fragments, the core protein-binding domain in fibronectin was tentatively mapped in the area of overlap of the two fragments, carboxyl-terminally from the gelatin-binding domain, possibly in the second type III repeat of fibronectin. These data document a specific and high affinity interaction between fibronectin and the core protein of the matrix heparan sulfate proteoglycan which may anchor the proteoglycan in the matrix.  相似文献   

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