Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:4.2.2.7 (heparinase)
1,270 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Four vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) splice variants containing 121, 165, 189, and 206 amino acids are produced from a single human gene as a result of alternative splicing. VEGF121 is not a heparin-binding protein, while the other VEGF species possess heparin binding ability. YU-ZAZ6 human melanoma cells expressed the mRNA encoding the VEGF receptor flt-1, but not the mRNA encoding the VEGF receptor KDR/flk-1. Both VEGF121 and VEGF165 bound to the VEGF receptors of these cells. Unexpectedly, heparin inhibited the binding of VEGF121 as well as the binding of VEGF165 to the VEGF receptors of the melanoma cells. Digestion of the cells with heparinase also inhibited the binding of both VEGF variants. The VEGF165 binding ability of heparinase-digested cells could be partially restored by the addition of exogenous heparin to the binding reaction. In contrast, the addition of heparin to heparinase-digested cells did not restore VEGF121 binding. These results suggest that cell-surface heparan sulfates may regulate the binding ability of the VEGF receptors of the melanoma cells. They also indicate that heparin is not able to fully substitute for cell surface-associated heparan sulfates since VEGF121 binding to the VEGF receptors of heparinase-treated cells is not restored by heparin. These data suggest that changes in the composition of cell-surface heparin-like molecules may differentially affect the interaction of various VEGF isoforms with VEGF receptors.
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PMID:VEGF121, a vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) isoform lacking heparin binding ability, requires cell-surface heparan sulfates for efficient binding to the VEGF receptors of human melanoma cells. 774 69

Trypanosoma cruzi attaches and invades a large variety of mammalian cells by receptor-mediated interactions, one of them involving the binding of parasite trans-sialidase to host sialyl receptors. Three proteoglycan-deficient mutants of Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells were used to probe the role of host heparin and heparan sulfate glycosaminoglycans (GAG) in T. cruzi invasion. All three mutants supported adhesion and infection to a much lower extent than the parental CHO cells. One of the mutants, pgsD-677, did not express heparan sulfate while containing three- to four-fold excess chondroitin sulfate, yet the cell line was a poor substrate for T. cruzi adhesion. Proteoglycan-deficient cells obtained by inhibiting GAG synthesis in parental cells with p-nitrophenyl-beta-D-xyloside, were also poor hosts for T. cruzi invasion. Furthermore, digestion of parental cells with heparinase and heparitinase, two lyases that specifically depolymerize heparin and heparan sulfate, reduced the potential of the cells to support T. cruzi adhesion and growth. Lyases that digested chondroitin sulfate and other GAGs did not affect T. cruzi invasion. These results suggest that heparin/heparan sulfate epitopes are receptors for T. cruzi invasion. The corresponding counter-receptor on T. cruzi appears to be penetrin, a heparin-binding protein that promotes trypanosome penetration into cells. Purified penetrin caused agglutination of red blood cells, and the hemagglutination was exquisitely sensitive to heparin and heparan sulfate. However, sialic acid and sialyl compounds did not inhibit penetrin-induced hemagglutination. Recombinant penetrin competitively inhibited T. cruzi invasion of proteoglycan-containing parental cells, but not of proteoglycan-deficient mutants nor of heparitinase-treated cells. Furthermore, consistent with the sugar specificity of penetrin as a hemagglutinin, recombinant penetrin competed for trypanosome invasion of a CHO cell mutant (Lec2) that expresses heparan sulfate but not sialyl residues. Given that the release of sialic acid from the proteoglycan-deficient mutants further reduced T. cruzi invasion, as did the removal of heparan sulfate from the Lec2 mutant, and given that penetrin does not bind to sialic acid with high affinity, the results indicate that the penetrin-heparan sulfate pathway for T. cruzi invasion is distinct from the trans-sialidase-sialic acid route.
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PMID:Mediation of Trypanosoma cruzi invasion by heparan sulfate receptors on host cells and penetrin counter-receptors on the trypanosomes. 793 30

Midkine (MK), a retinoic acid-inducible heparin-binding protein, is a mitogen which initiates a cascade of intracellular protein tyrosine phosphorylation mediated by the JAK/STAT pathway after binding to its high affinity p200(+)/MKR cell surface receptor in the G401 cell line [Ratovitski, E. A. (1998) J. Biol. Chem. 273, 3654-3660]. In this study, we determined the biophysical characteristics of purified recombinant murine MK and analyzed the requirements for ligand multimerization and cell surface proteoglycan binding for the G401 cell mitogenic activity of MK. Our studies indicate that the secreted form of MK (M = 13 kDa) exists in solution as an asymmetric monomer with a frictional coefficient of 1. 48 and a Stokes radius of 23.7 A. By constructing bead models of MK using the program AtoB and the program HYDRO to predict the hydrodynamic properties of each model, our data suggest that MK has a dumb-bell shape in solution composed of independent N- and C-terminal domains separated by an extended linker. This asymmetric MK monomer is a biologically active ligand with mitogenic activity on G401 cells in vitro. Neither heparin-induced formation of noncovalent MK multimers nor tissue transglutaminase II covalent multimerization of MK enhanced MK mitogenic activity in this system. Since neither heparin competition nor cell treatment with chondroitinase ABC or heparinase III abolished the mitogenic effects of MK on G401 cells, cell-surface proteoglycan binding by MK does not appear to be a requirement for its observed mitogenic effects. These results provide strong evidence that the MK-specific p200(+)/MKR has distinctive biochemical properties which distinguish it from the receptor tyrosine phosphatase cell-surface proteoglycan PTPzeta/RPTPbeta and support the hypothesis that the diverse biological effects of MK are mediated by multiple cell-specific signal transduction receptors.
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PMID:Monomeric midkine induces tumor cell proliferation in the absence of cell-surface proteoglycan binding. 1082 69

We previously showed that rat thyroglobulin (Tg) is a heparin-binding protein and that heparin inhibits Tg binding to megalin (gp330), an endocytic Tg receptor found on the apical surface of thyrocytes. Cooperation between cell surface receptors and heparin-like molecules, namely heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGs), can facilitate cell surface binding of some heparin-binding proteins. Based on our previous findings indicating that heparin and megalin-binding sites of rat Tg are functionally related, here we investigated whether rat Tg binds to HSPGs, which are expressed by thyroid cells. We showed in solid phase assays that unlabeled rat Tg binds to a heparan sulfate (HS) preparation in a dose-dependent, saturable manner, with moderately high affinity (Kd approximately 19 nM, Ki approximately 25 nM). Binding was inhibited by heparin and by HS itself. We then studied the role of HSPGs in Tg binding to FRTL-5 cells, a differentiated Fisher rat thyroid cell line. As previously reported, after incubation of FRTL-5 cells with unlabeled rat Tg at 4 degrees C, heparin released virtually all the cell-bound Tg. Co-incubation of Tg with HS or with a preparation of HSPGs resulted in a reduction of binding by 35%-40%. When FRTL-5 cells were preincubated with heparitinase or heparinase I, which released 20%-30% of cell surface HSPGs, Tg binding was reduced to a similar extent. An antibody against a Tg heparin-binding site functionally related to a major megalin-binding site virtually abolished Tg binding to HS and to FRTL-5 cells, supporting the hypothesis that combined interactions of Tg with HSPGs and with megalin are involved in Tg binding to rat thyroid cells.
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PMID:Binding of rat thyroglobulin to heparan sulfate proteoglycans. 1095 7

Connective tissue growth factor (CTGF) is a cysteine-rich, extracellular matrix-associated heparin-binding protein implicated in a variety of fibrotic disorders. CTGF is initially synthesized as a mosaic protein containing four discrete structural modules (CTGF(1-4)) but this is susceptible to proteolytic cleavage yielding isoforms comprising modules 3 and 4 (CTGF(3-4)) or module 4 alone (CTGF(4)). In this study, we show that cultured rat hepatic stellate cells (HSCs) produce CTGF(1-4) and CTGF(3-4) following treatment with transforming growth factor-beta and that CTGF is a cell adhesion factor for activated HSCs. Low density lipoprotein receptor-associated protein (LRP) is a receptor for CTGF(1-4) or CTGF(3-4), but not CTGF(4), whereas cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGs) are binding sites for all CTGF isoforms. Prior occupancy of LRP with other LRP ligands, receptor associated protein, anti-LRP, or a thrombospondin type I peptide (TEWSACSKTCG) resulted in a 50% decrease in the adhesion of activated HSCs to CTGF(1-4) or CTGF(3-4) whereas there was no effect on CTGF(4)-mediated adhesion. Co-incubation of CTGF with heparin or perturbation of cell surface HSPGs with heparinase or sodium chlorate completely blocked adhesion of activated HSCs to all CTGF isoforms. Freshly isolated HSCs demonstrated only weak binding to CTGF but strong binding to fibronectin. Thus HSC adhesion is at least partially promoted by CTGF through its binding to LRP, a process that is heparin-dependent. CTGF-LRP interactions are likely mediated by module 3 and CTGF-heparin interactions occur principally in module 4, although additional motifs may account for the heparin-dependency of LRP binding. These data show that LRP and HSPGs are utilized by HSCs for binding to CTGF and suggest that these cell surface molecules may be involved in mediating CTGF activity or adhesive signaling during the activation process.
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PMID:Low density lipoprotein receptor-related protein (LRP) is a heparin-dependent adhesion receptor for connective tissue growth factor (CTGF) in rat activated hepatic stellate cells. 1458 98

Cyclophilin B (CyPB) is a heparin-binding protein first identified as a receptor for cyclosporin A. In previous studies, we reported that CyPB triggers chemotaxis and integrin-mediated adhesion of T-lymphocytes by way of interaction with two types of binding sites. The first site corresponds to a signalling receptor; the second site has been identified as heparan sulphate (HS) and appears crucial to induce cell adhesion. Characterization of the HS-binding unit is critical to understand the requirement of HS in pro-adhesive activity of CyPB. By using a strategy based on gel mobility shift assays with fluorophore-labelled oligosaccharides, we demonstrated that the minimal heparin unit required for efficient binding of CyPB is an octasaccharide. The mutants CyPB(KKK-) [where KKK- refers to the substitutions K3A(Lys3-->Ala)/K4A/K5A] and CyPB(DeltaYFD) (where Tyr14-Phe-Asp16 has been deleted) failed to interact with octasaccharides, confirming that the Y14FD16 and K3KK5 clusters are required for CyPB binding. Molecular modelling revealed that both clusters are spatially arranged so that they may act synergistically to form a binding site for the octasaccharide. We then demonstrated that heparin-derived octasaccharides and higher degree of polymerization oligosaccharides inhibited the interaction between CyPB and fluorophore-labelled HS chains purified from T-lymphocytes, and strongly reduced the HS-dependent pro-adhesive activity of CyPB. However, oligosaccharides or heparin were unable to restore adhesion of heparinase-treated T-lymphocytes, indicating that HS has to be present on the cell membrane to support the pro-adhesive activity of CyPB. Altogether, these results demonstrate that the octasaccharide is likely to be the minimal length unit required for efficient binding of CyPB to cell surface HS and consequent HS-dependent cell responses.
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PMID:Octasaccharide is the minimal length unit required for efficient binding of cyclophilin B to heparin and cell surface heparan sulphate. 1510 1