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1.
Heparanase expression in invasive trophoblasts and acute vascular damage   总被引:16,自引:0,他引:16  
Heparan sulfate proteoglycans play a pivotal role in tissue function, development, inflammation, and immunity. We have identified a novel cDNA encoding human heparanase, an enzyme thought to cleave heparan sulfate in physiology and disease, and have located the HEP gene on human chromosome 4q21. Monoclonal antibodies against human heparanase located the enzyme along invasive extravillous trophoblasts of human placenta and along endothelial cells in organ xenografts targeted by hyperacute rejection, both sites of heparan sulfate digestion. Heparanase deposition was evident in arterial walls in normal tissues; however, vascular heparan sulfate cleavage was coincident with heparanase enzyme during inflammatory episodes. These findings suggest that heparanase elaboration and control of catalytic activity may contribute to the development and pathogenesis of vascular disease and suggest that heparanase intervention might be a useful therapeutic target.  相似文献   

2.
The endo-beta-glucuronidase, heparanase, is an enzyme that cleaves heparan sulfate at specific intra-chain sites, yielding heparan sulfate fragments with appreciable size and biological activities. Heparanase activity has been traditionally correlated with cell invasion associated with cancer metastasis, angiogenesis, and inflammation. In addition, heparanase up-regulation has been documented in a variety of primary human tumors, correlating with increased vascular density and poor postoperative survival, suggesting that heparanase may be considered as a target for anticancer drugs. In an attempt to identify the protein motif that would serve as a target for the development of heparanase inhibitors, we looked for protein domains that mediate the interaction of heparanase with its heparan sulfate substrate. We have identified three potential heparin binding domains and provided evidence that one of these is mapped at the N terminus of the 50-kDa active heparanase subunit. A peptide corresponding to this region (Lys(158)-Asp(171)) physically associates with heparin and heparan sulfate. Moreover, the peptide inhibited heparanase enzymatic activity in a dose-responsive manner, presumably through competition with the heparan sulfate substrate. Furthermore, antibodies directed to this region inhibited heparanase activity, and a deletion construct lacking this domain exhibited no enzymatic activity. NMR titration experiments confirmed residues Lys(158)-Asn(162) as amino acids that firmly bound heparin. Deletion of a second heparin binding domain sequence (Gln(270)-Lys(280)) yielded an inactive enzyme that failed to interact with cell surface heparan sulfate and hence accumulated in the culture medium of transfected HEK 293 cells to exceptionally high levels. The two heparin/heparan sulfate recognition domains are potentially attractive targets for the development of heparanase inhibitors.  相似文献   

3.
Interleukin-2 (IL-2) is a multifaceted cytokine with immunostimulatory and immunosuppressive properties. Our laboratory recently demonstrated that the availability of IL-2 is regulated, in part, by association with perlecan, a heparan sulfate proteoglycan. Given the abundance of perlecan in blood vessels, we asked whether IL-2 is present in vessel walls. Our results indicate that IL-2 is associated with endothelial and smooth muscle cells within the human arterial wall. This IL-2 is released by heparanase, and promotes the proliferation of an IL-2-dependent cell line. Given the presence of IL-2 in human arteries, we asked whether the large vessels of IL-2-deficient mice were normal. The aortas of IL-2-deficient mice exhibited a loss of smooth muscle cells, suggesting that IL-2 may contribute to their survival. In their entirety, these results suggest a here-to-fore unrecognized role of IL-2 in vascular biology, and have significant implications for both the immune and cardiovascular systems.  相似文献   

4.
The role of different glycosaminoglycan species from the vessel walls as physiological antithrombotic agents remains controversial. To further investigate this aspect we extracted glycosaminoglycans from human thoracic aorta and saphenous vein. The different species were highly purified and their anticoagulant and antithrombotic activities tested by in vitro and in vivo assays. We observed that dermatan sulfate is the major anticoagulant and antithrombotic among the vessel wall glycosaminoglycans while the bulk of heparan sulfate is a poorly sulfated glycosaminoglycan, devoid of anticoagulant and antithrombotic activities. Minor amounts of particular a heparan sulfate (< 5% of the total arterial glycosaminoglycans) with high anticoagulant activity were also observed, as assessed by its retention on an antithrombin-affinity column. Possibly, this anticoagulant heparan sulfate originates from the endothelial cells and may exert a significant physiological role due to its location in the interface between the vessel wall and the blood. In view of these results we discuss a possible balance between the two glycosaminoglycan-dependent anticoagulant pathways present in the vascular wall. One is based on antithrombin activation by the heparan sulfate expressed by the endothelial cells. The other, which may assume special relevance after vascular endothelial injury, is based on heparin cofactor II activation by the dermatan sulfate proteoglycans synthesized by cells from the subendothelial layer.  相似文献   

5.
Heparanase is an endo-β-glucuronidase that cleaves heparan sulfate side chains, leading to structural modifications that loosen the extracellular matrix barrier and associated with tumor metastasis, inflammation and angiogenesis. In addition, the highly sulfated heparan sulfate proteoglycans are important constituents of the glomerular basement membrane and its permselective properties. Recent studies suggest a role for heparanase in several experimental and human glomerular diseases associated with proteinuria such as diabetes, minimal change disease, and membranous nephropathy. Here, we quantified blood and urine heparanase levels in renal transplant recipients and patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD), and assessed whether alterations in heparanase levels correlate with proteinuria and renal function. We report that in transplanted patients, urinary heparanase was markedly elevated, inversely associated with estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR), suggesting a relationship between heparanase and graft function. In CKD patients, urinary heparanase was markedly elevated and associated with proteinuria, but not with eGFR. In addition, urinary heparanase correlated significantly with plasma heparanase in transplanted patients. Such a systemic spread of heparanase may lead to damage of cells and tissues alongside the kidney.The newly described association between heparanase, proteinuria and decreased renal function is expected to pave the way for new therapeutic options aimed at attenuating chronic renal allograft nephropathy, leading to improved graft survival and patient outcome.  相似文献   

6.
Proteoglycans in pathological conditions: atherosclerosis   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Proteoglycans accumulate within the innermost layer (intima) of blood vessels during atherosclerosis. This accumulation is marked in some forms of human atherosclerosis and is particularly prominent in vessels that have been experimentally injured and have healed by the process of reendothelialization. The two major cell types of the arterial wall, endothelium and smooth muscle, are the major sources of arterial proteoglycans, and cell cultures have demonstrated that these cells synthesize at least three families of proteoglycans similar to those present in human aorta. Each family differs with regard to molecular size, glycosaminoglycan and oligosaccharide content, and ability to aggregate in the presence of hyaluronic acid. Furthermore, each cell type possesses a distinct pattern of proteoglycan synthesis. Smooth muscle cells synthesize and secrete primarily chondroitin sulfate and dermatan sulfate-containing proteoglycans, whereas endothelial cells synthesize and secrete large amounts of heparan sulfate proteoglycan. Evidence is presented to indicate that the synthesis of proteoglycans is modulated as a function of growth and migratory state of the vascular cells.  相似文献   

7.
We have determined, using polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, that endothelial cell cultures derived from rabbit aorta synthesize a wide spectrum of heparan sulfate proteoglycans. The electrophoretically slower-moving heparan sulfate proteoglycans have been isolated from the endothelial cell culture medium. Antibodies to these proteoglycan species have been raised in the goat. The goat antiserum binds selectively the heparan sulfate proteoglycans that were used for the immunization and does not cross-react with the other (faster moving) species. Only a moderate level of cross-reactivity was observed with the heparan sulfate proteoglycans synthesized by another cell line (presumably smooth muscle cells) of vascular derivation. These results support the suggestion that structural differences in the heparan sulfate proteoglycans are responsible for certain differences in function between the various cell types of the vessel wall.  相似文献   

8.
Heparan sulfate is a highly sulfated polysaccharide abundantly present in the extracellular matrix. Heparan sulfate consists of a disaccharide repeating unit of glucosamine and glucuronic and iduronic acid residues. The functions of heparan sulfate are largely dictated by its size as well as the sulfation patterns. Heparanase is an enzyme that cleaves heparan sulfate polysaccharide into smaller fragments, regulating the functions of heparan sulfate. Understanding the substrate specificity plays a critical role in dissecting the biological functions of heparanase and heparan sulfate. The prevailing view is that heparanase recognizes specific sulfation patterns in heparan sulfate. However, emerging evidence suggests that heparanase is capable of varying its substrate specificities depending on the saccharide structures around the cleavage site. The plastic substrate specificity suggests a complex role of heparanase in regulating the structures of heparan sulfate in matrix biology.  相似文献   

9.
When shed from the cell surface, the heparan sulfate proteoglycan syndecan-1 can facilitate the growth, angiogenesis, and metastasis of tumors. Here we report that tumor cell expression of heparanase, an enzyme known to be a potent promoter of tumor progression and metastasis, regulates both the level and location of syndecan-1 within the tumor microenvironment by enhancing its synthesis and subsequent shedding from the tumor cell surface. Heparanase regulation of syndecan-1 is detected in both human myeloma and breast cancer cell lines. This regulation requires the presence of active enzyme, because mutated forms of heparanase lacking heparan sulfate-degrading activity failed to influence syndecan-1 expression or shedding. Removal of heparan sulfate from the cell surface using bacterial heparitinase dramatically accelerated syndecan-1 shedding, suggesting that the effects of heparanase on syndecan-1 expression by tumor cells may be due, at least in part, to enzymatic removal or reduction in the size of heparan sulfate chains. Animals bearing tumors formed from cells expressing high levels of heparanase or animals transgenic for heparanase expression exhibited elevated levels of serum syndecan-1 as compared with controls, indicating that heparanase regulation of syndecan-1 expression and shedding can occur in vivo and impact cancer progression and perhaps other pathological states. These results reveal a new mechanism by which heparanase promotes an aggressive tumor phenotype and suggests that heparanase and syndecan-1 act synergistically to fine tune the tumor microenvironment and ensure robust tumor growth.  相似文献   

10.
Heparan sulfate is rapidly degraded by an endoglycosidase (heparanase) secreted by activated platelets. Since the cleavage and release of heparan sulfate would profoundly alter the local physiology of the endothelium, platelet heparanase activity should be tightly regulated. Consistent with this hypothesis, platelet heparanase was found to degrade endothelial cell heparan sulfate at pH 6.0 but not at pH 7.4, even though 25% of maximum activity was detected at pH 7.4. Loss of heparanase activity occurred rapidly (t1/2 ≅ 20 min) and reversibly at physiologic pH but did not occur at acidic pH (<7.0). Inactivation of heparanase at pH 7.4 did not affect heparin binding and was reversed by 0.5 M NaCl or by heparan sulfate but not by chondroitin sulfate, suggesting inactive heparanase could be tethered on cell surfaces and the function regulated by heparan sulfate. Heparanase was gradually inactivated by trypsin and urokinase (t1/2 = 5 h) but resisted cleavage by leukocyte cathepsin G, leukocyte elastase, plasmin, and thrombin. These findings are consistent with a model in which platelet heparanase is active at the low pH of inflammation but inactive under physiologic conditions preventing inadvertent cleavage of heparan sulfate and loss of physiologic functions of endothelial cells. J. Cell. Physiol. 175:255–267, 1998. © 1998 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

11.
Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) caused by arteriosclerosis are the leading cause of death and disability worldwide. In the late stages of atherosclerosis, the atherosclerotic plaque gradually expands in the blood vessels, resulting in vascular stenosis. When the unstable plaque ruptures and falls off, it blocks the vessel causing vascular thrombosis, leading to strokes, myocardial infarctions, and a series of other serious diseases that endanger people''s lives. Therefore, regulating plaque stability is the main means used to address the high mortality associated with CVDs. The progression of the atherosclerotic plaque is a complex integration of vascular cell apoptosis, lipid metabolism disorders, inflammatory cell infiltration, vascular smooth muscle cell migration, and neovascular infiltration. More recently, emerging evidence has demonstrated that non-coding RNAs (ncRNAs) play a significant role in regulating the pathophysiological process of atherosclerotic plaque formation by affecting the biological functions of the vasculature and its associated cells. The purpose of this paper is to comprehensively review the regulatory mechanisms involved in the susceptibility of atherosclerotic plaque rupture, discuss the limitations of current approaches to treat plaque instability, and highlight the potential clinical value of ncRNAs as novel diagnostic biomarkers and potential therapeutic strategies to improve plaque stability and reduce the risk of major cardiovascular events.  相似文献   

12.
Circulating macrophages and metastatic tumor cells can penetrate the vascular endothelium and migrate from the circulatory system to extravascular compartments. Both activated murine macrophages and different metastatic tumor cells (B16-BL6 melanoma; ESb T-lymphoma) attach, invade, and penetrate confluent vascular endothelial cell monlayer in vitro, by degrading heparan sulfate proteoglycans in the subendothelial extracellular matrix. The sensitivity of the enzymes from the various sources degrading the heparan sulfate proteoglycan was challenged and compared by a series of inhibitors. Activated macrophages demonstrate a heparanase with an endoglycosidase activity that cleaves from the [35S]O4 = -labeled heparan sulfate proteoglycans of the extracellular matrix 10 kDa glycosaminoglycan fragments. The macrophages do not store the heparanase intracellularly but it is instead found pericellularly and requires a continuous cell-matrix contact at the optimal pH for maintaining cell growth. The degradation of [35S]O4 = -labeled extracellular matrix proteoglycans by the macrophages' heparanase is significantly inhibited in the presence of heparan sulfate (10 micrograms/ml), arteparon (10 micrograms/ml), and heparin at a concentration of 3 micrograms/ml. In contrast, other glycosaminoglycans such as hyaluronic acid, dermatan sulfate, and chondroitin sulfate as well as the specific inhibitor of exo-beta-glucuronidase D-saccharic acid 1,4-lactone failed to inhibit the degradation of sulfated proteoglycans in the subendothelial extracellular matrix. Degradation of this heparan sulfate proteoglycan is a two-step sequential process involving protease activity followed by heparanase activity. However, the following antiproteases--alpha 2-macroglobulin, antithrombin III, leupeptin, and phenylmethylsulfony fluoride (PMSF)--failed to inhibit this degradation process, and only alpha 1-antitrypsin inhibited the heparanase activity. B16-BL6 metastatic melanoma cell heparanase, which is also a cell-associated enzyme, was inhibited by heparin to the same extent as the macrophage heparanase. On the other hand, heparanase of the highly metastatic variant (ESb) of a methylcholanthrene-induced T lymphoma, which is an extracellular enzyme released by the cells to the incubation medium, was more sensitive to heparin and arteparon than the macrophages' heparanase, inhibited at concentrations of 1 and 3 micrograms/ml, respectively. These results may indicate the potential use of heparin or other glycosaminoglycans as specific and differential inhibitors for the formation in certain cases of blood-borne tumor metastasis.  相似文献   

13.
Diabetic nephropathy is one of the main causes of end-stage renal disease, in which the development of tubular damage depends on factors such as high glucose levels, albuminuria and advanced glycation end-product. In this study, we analyzed the involvement of heparanase, a heparan sulfate glycosidase, in the homeostasis of proximal tubular epithelial cells in the diabetic milieu. In vitro studies were performed on a wild-type and stably heparanase-silenced adult tubular line (HK2) and HEK293. Gene and protein expression analyses were performed in the presence and absence of diabetic mediators. Albumin and advanced glycation end-product, but not high glucose levels, increased heparanase expression in adult tubular cells via the AKT/PI3K signaling pathway. This over-expression of heparanase is then responsible for heparan sulfate reduction via its endoglycosidase activity and its capacity to regulate the heparan sulfate-proteoglycans core protein. In fact, heparanase regulates the gene expression of syndecan-1, the most abundant heparan sulfate-proteoglycans in tubular cells. We showed that heparanase is a target gene of the diabetic nephropathy mediators albumin and advanced glycation end-product, so it may be relevant to the progression of diabetic nephropathy. It could take part in several processes, e.g. extracellular-matrix remodeling and cell-cell crosstalk, via its heparan sulfate endoglycosidase activity and capacity to regulate the expression of the heparan sulfate-proteoglycan syndecan-1.  相似文献   

14.
Heparan sulfates, the carbohydrate chains of heparan sulfate proteoglycans, play an important role in basement membrane organization and endothelial barrier function. We explored whether endothelial cells secrete a heparan sulfate degrading heparanase under inflammatory conditions and what pathways were responsible for heparanase expression. Heparanase mRNA and protein by Western blot were induced when cultured endothelial cells were treated with cytokines, oxidized low-density lipoprotein (LDL) or fatty acids. Heparanase protein in the cell media was induced 2-10-fold when cells were treated with tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFalpha) or interleukin 1beta (IL-1beta). Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), in contrast, decreased heparanase secretion. Inhibitors to nuclear factor-kappaB (NFkappaB), PI3-kinase, MAP kinase, or c-jun kinase (JNK) did not affect TNFalpha-induced heparanase secretion. Interestingly, inhibition of caspase-8 completely abolished heparanase secretion induced by TNFalpha. Fatty acids also induced heparanase, and this required an Sp1 site in the heparanase promoter. Immunohistochemical analyses of cross sections of aorta showed intense staining for heparanase in the endothelium of apoE-null mice but not wild-type mice. Thus, heparanase is an inducible inflammatory gene product that may play an important role in vascular biology.  相似文献   

15.
HPSE (heparanase) is the predominant enzyme in mammals capable of cleaving heparan sulfate, an activity highly implicated in cellular invasion and tumor metastasis. HPSE expression is induced in many types of cancer and increased HPSE levels are most often associated with increased tumor metastasis and reduced patient survival post operation. In addition, HPSE induction is associated with progression of the primary tumors but the mechanism(s) underlying tumor expansion by HPSE have not been sufficiently resolved. Our results establish a role for heparanase in modulating autophagy in normal and malignant cells, thereby conferring growth advantages as well as resistance to chemotherapy.  相似文献   

16.
Heparanase, an endo-β-d-glucuronidase, is involved in numerous normal physiological and pathological processes, such as inflammation, wound healing and tumour metastasis/angiogenesis, through its ability to mediate the degradation of heparan sulfate, a key structural component of the extracellular matrix and on the surface of cells. Identifying endogenous molecules that can regulate heparanase activity will aid the understanding of its molecular function in health and disease and provide the potential for development of novel anti-cancer and anti-inflammatory therapeutics. The ability of the extracellular heparanase to tether onto cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans and other receptor(s), such as the cation-independent mannose-6-phosphate receptor, is key to its activation, function and uptake into intracellular compartments. Here we describe experiments demonstrating that a relatively abundant plasma glycoprotein, histidine-rich glycoprotein, directly interacts with platelet-derived heparanase and enhances its enzymatic activity. The findings in this study also show that histidine-rich glycoprotein interferes with heparanase binding to cell surface receptors, particularly heparan sulfate proteoglycans. Thus, the interaction between histidine-rich glycoprotein and heparanase can potentially regulate the role of heparanase in a variety of physiological and pathological conditions.  相似文献   

17.
Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) play an important role in the pathogenesis of vascular diseases, such as atherosclerosis, plaque rupture and aneurysms. Although several MMPs have been demonstrated in the lesions of atherosclerosis, their expression profiles during the initiation and progression of lesions have not been fully determined. We hypothesized that the expression of various MMPs, along with their endogenous inhibitors, may be differentially regulated dependent upon the lesion progression. Therefore, we made a temporal and quantitative analysis of the mRNA and protein expression of MMPs and tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases expressed in the different stages of atherosclerotic lesions of rabbits and humans. We found that MMP-1, MMP-12 and MMP-13 expression was nearly absent in the normal arterial wall, but was remarkably increased with lesion progression. Furthermore, the expression of these MMPs in the lesions was closely associated with intimal macrophages and monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 expression, suggesting that the intimal macrophages are the major source of production of these MMPs. MMP-3 and MT1-MMP were also significantly upregulated in the early-stage lesions and fatty streaks compared to the normal aortas of rabbits. Our results indicate that MMP-1, -12, and -13 derived from intimal macrophages may play a pivotal role in both lesion initiation and progression, and therefore are potential therapeutic targets for the treatment of plaque rupture and aneurysm formation.  相似文献   

18.
Patients on chronic hemodialysis (HD) are at high risk for developing atherosclerosis and cardiovascular complications. Heparanase, an endoglycosidase that cleaves heparan sulfate (HS) side chains of proteoglycans, is involved in extracellular matrix degradation and, as such, may be involved in the atherosclerotic lesion progression. We hypothesize that heparanase is elevated in HD patients, partly due to its release from primed circulating polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNLs), undergoing degranulation. Priming of PMNLs was assessed by levels of CD11b and the rate of superoxide release. Heparanase mRNA expression in PMNLs was determined by RT-PCR. PMNL and plasma levels of heparanase were determined by immunoblotting, immunofluorescence, and flow cytometry analyses. The levels of soluble HS in plasma were measured by a competition ELISA. This study shows that PMNLs isolated from HD patients have higher mRNA and protein levels of heparanase compared with normal control (NC) subjects and that heparanase levels correlate positively with PMNL priming. Plasma levels of heparanase were higher in HD patients than in NC subjects and were further elevated after the dialysis session. In addition, heparanase expression inversely correlates with plasma HS levels. A pronounced expression of heparanase was found in human atherosclerotic lesions. The increased heparanase activity in the blood of HD patients results at least in part from the degranulation of primed PMNLs and may contribute to the acceleration of the atherosclerotic process. Our findings highlight primed PMNLs as a possible source for the increased heparanase in HD patients, posing heparanase as a new risk factor for cardiovascular complications and atherosclerosis.  相似文献   

19.
Elevated levels of lipid peroxidation and increased formation of reactive oxygen species within the vascular wall in atherosclerosis can overwhelm cellular antioxidant defence mechanisms. Accumulating evidence implicates oxidatively modified low density lipoproteins (LDL) in vascular dysfunction in atherosclerosis and oxidized LDL have been localized with in atherosclerotic lesions. We here report that human oxidatively modified LDL induce expression of 'antioxidant-like' stress proteins in vascular cells, involving increases in the activity of L-cystine transport, glutathione synthesis, heme oxygenase-1 and the murine stress protein MSP23. Moreover, treatment of human arterial smooth muscle cells with the dietary antioxidant vitamin C markedly attenuates adaptive increases in endogenous antioxidant gene expression and affords protection against smooth muscle cell apoptosis induced by moderately oxidized LDL. As vascular cell death is a key feature of atherosclerotic lesions and may contribute to the plaque 'necrotic' core, cap rupture and thrombosis, our findings suggest that the cytoprotective actions of vitamin C could limit plaque instability in advanced atherosclerosis.  相似文献   

20.
Cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans undergo unique intracellular degradation pathways after they are endocytosed from the cell surface. Heparanase, an endo-beta-glucuronidase capable of cleaving heparan sulfate, has been demonstrated to contribute to the physiological degradation of heparan sulfate proteoglycans and therefore regulation of their biological functions. A rat parathyroid cell line was found to produce heparanase with an optimal activity at neutral and slightly acidic conditions suggesting that the enzyme participates in heparan sulfate proteoglycan metabolism in extralysosomal compartments. To elucidate the detailed properties of the purified enzyme, the substrate specificity against naturally occurring heparan sulfates and chemically modified heparins was studied. Cleavage sites of rat heparanase were present in heparan sulfate chains obtained from a variety of animal organs, but their occurrence was infrequent (average, 1-2 sites per chain) requiring recognition of both undersulfated and sulfated regions of heparan sulfate. On the other hand intact and chemically modified heparins were not cleaved by heparanase. The carbohydrate structure of the newly generated reducing end region of heparan sulfate cleaved by the enzyme was determined, and it represented relatively undersulfated structures. O-Sulfation of heparan sulfate chains also played important roles in substrate recognition, implying that rat parathyroid heparanase acts near the boundary of highly sulfated and undersulfated domains of heparan sulfate proteoglycans. Further elucidation of the roles of heparanase in normal physiological processes would provide an important tool for analyzing the regulation of heparan sulfate-dependent cell functions.  相似文献   

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