Heparan sulfate (HS) binds and modulates the transport and activity of a large repertoire of regulatory proteins. The HS phage display antibodies are powerful tools for the analysis of native HS structure in situ; however, their epitopes are not well defined. Analysis of the binding specificities of a set of HS antibodies by competitive binding assays with well defined chemically modified heparins demonstrates that O-sulfates are essential for binding; however, increasing sulfation does not necessarily correlate with increased antibody reactivity. IC 50 values for competition with double modified heparins were not predictable from IC 50 values with corresponding singly modified heparins. Binding assays and immunohistochemistry revealed that individual antibodies recognize distinct epitopes and that these are not single linear sequences but families of structurally similar motifs in which subtle variations in sulfation and conformation modify the affinity of interaction. Modeling of the antibodies demonstrates that they possess highly basic CDR3 and surrounding surfaces, presenting a number of possible orientations for HS binding. Unexpectedly, there are significant differences between the existence of epitopes in tissue sections and observed in vitro in dot blotted tissue extracts, demonstrating that in vitro specificity does not necessarily correlate with specificity in situ/ vivo. The epitopes are therefore more complex than previously considered. Overall, these data have significance for structure-activity relationships of HS, because the model of one antibody recognizing multiple HS structures and the influence of other in situ HS-binding proteins on epitope availability are likely to reflect the selectivity of many HS-protein interactions in vivo.HS 2 belongs to the glycosaminoglycan family of polysaccharides and can be considered the most information-rich biopolymer in nature. HS chains consist of repeating -D-glucuronic acid and GlcNAc units, which are subject to enzymatic postpolymeric modification by N-deacetylation and N-sulfation of GlcNAc, O-sulfation at various positions, and epimerization of D-glucuronic acid to its C-5 epimer, iduronic acid. HS biosynthetic enzymes do not act upon every potential site within a chain, resulting in chains with a high level of structural diversity and a distinct domain structure, with regions of unmodified saccharides (N-acetyl domains) and highly modified saccharides (N-sulfated domains) flanked by regions of alternating modified and unmodified disaccharides (transition or N-acetyl/ N-sulfated domains) (1-4). HS chains are usually attached to core proteins, forming HS proteoglycans, and these proteoglycans represent one of the major components of most metazoan cell surfaces and extracellular matrices. Here, they control cellcell and cell-matrix communication by association with a large repertoire of regulatory proteins (5), including growth factors, morphogens, extracellular matrix components, enzymes, cell adhesion molecules, and cytokines. It is through these int...
Previously, it has been shown that rat Schwann cells (SCs), but not olfactory ensheathing cells (OECs), form a boundary with astrocytes, due to a SC-specific secreted factor. Here, we identify highly sulfated heparan sulfates (HSs) and fibroblast growth factors (FGFs) 1 and 9 as possible determinants of boundary formation induced by rat SCs. Disaccharide analysis of HS in SC-conditioned and rat OECconditioned media showed that SCs secrete more highly sulfated HS than OECs. The dependence of the boundary-forming activity on high levels of sulfation was confirmed using a panel of semisynthetic modified heparins with variable levels of sulfation. Furthermore, extracellular HS 6-O-endosulfatase enzymes, Sulf 1 and Sulf 2, were expressed at a significantly lower level by SCs compared with OECs, and siRNA reduction of Sulfs in OECs was, in itself, sufficient to induce boundary formation. This demonstrates a key role for remodelling (reduction) of HS 6-O-sulfation by OECs, compared with SCs, to suppress boundary formation. Furthermore, specific anti-FGF1 and anti-FGF9 antibodies disrupted SC-astrocyte boundary formation, supporting a role for an HS sulfation-dependent FGF signaling mechanism via FGF receptors on astrocytes. We propose a model in which FGF1 and FGF9 signaling is differentially modulated by patterns of glial cell HS sulfation, dependent on Sulf 1 and Sulf 2 expression, to control FGF receptor 3-IIIb-mediated astrocytic responses. Moreover, these data suggest manipulation of HS sulfation after CNS injury as a potential novel approach for therapeutic intervention in CNS repair.
Heparan sulfate (HS) is a structurally complex polysaccharide located on the cell surface and in the extracellular matrix, where it participates in numerous biological processes through interactions with a vast number of regulatory proteins such as growth factors and morphogens. HS is crucial for lung development; disruption of HS synthesis in flies and mice results in a major aberration of airway branching, and in mice, it results in neonatal death as a consequence of malformed lungs and respiratory distress. Epithelial-mesenchymal interactions governing lung morphogenesis are directed by various diffusible proteins, many of which bind to, and are regulated by HS, including fibroblast growth factors, sonic hedgehog, and bone morphogenetic proteins. The majority of research into the molecular mechanisms underlying defective lung morphogenesis and pulmonary pathologies, such as bronchopulmonary dysplasia and pulmonary hypoplasia associated with congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH), has focused on abnormal protein expression. The potential contribution of HS to abnormalities of lung development has yet to be explored to any significant extent, which is somewhat surprising given the abnormal lung phenotype exhibited by mutant mice synthesizing abnormal HS. This review summarizes our current understanding of the role of HS and HS-binding proteins in lung morphogenesis and will present in vitro and in vivo evidence for the fundamental importance of HS in airway development. Finally, we will discuss the future possibility of HS-based therapeutics for ameliorating insufficient lung growth associated with lung diseases such as CDH.
Heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGs) are essential to respiratory morphogenesis in species as diverse as Drosophila and mice; they play a role in the regulation of numerous HS-binding growth factors, e.g. fibroblast growth factors. Moreover, an HS analogue, heparin, modulates lung growth in vitro. However, it has been difficult to assess the roles of specific HS structures in lung development due to technical barriers to their spatial localisation. Lungs from Sprague-Dawley rats were harvested between E15.5 and E19.5 and immediately fixed in 4 % (w/v) paraformaldehyde (in 0.1 M phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), pH 7.4). Lungs were washed in PBS, cryoprotected with 20% (w/v) sucrose (in PBS), gelatin embedded [7.5% (w/v) gelatin, 15% (w/v) sucrose in PBS], before being covered in Cryo-M-Bed (Bright, Huntingdon, UK) and snap frozen at -40 degrees C. Cryosections were cut at 8 microm and stained with the HSPG core protein specific antibody 3G10 and a HS 'phage display antibody, EW4G2V. 3G10 and EW4G2V immunohistochemistry highlighted the presence of specific HS structures in lungs at all gestational ages examined. 3G10 strongly labelled airway basement membranes and the surrounding mesenchyme and showed weak staining of airway epithelial cells. EW4G2V, however, was far more selective, labelling the airway basement membranes only. Mesenchymal and epithelial cells did not appear to possess the HS epitope recognised by EW4G2V at these gestational ages. Novel 'phage display antibodies allow the spatial distribution of tissue HS to be analysed, and demonstrate in situ that distinct cellular compartments of a tissue possess different HS structures, possibly on the same proteoglycan core protein. These probes offer a new opportunity to determine the role of HS in the pathogenesis of congenital defects such as congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH), where lung development is aberrant, and the resulting pulmonary hypoplasia and hypertension are a primary cause of mortality.
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