Literature DB >> 10455023

Evidence that platelet and tumour heparanases are similar enzymes.

C Freeman1, A M Browne, C R Parish.   

Abstract

In order to enter tissues, blood-borne metastatic tumour cells and leucocytes need to extravasate through the vascular basal lamina (BL), a process which involves a battery of degradative enzymes. A key degradative enzyme is the endoglycosidase heparanase, which cleaves heparan sulphate (HS), an important structural component of the vascular BL. Previously, tumour-derived heparanase activity (which has been shown to be related to the metastatic potential of murine and human melanoma cell lines) was reported to cleave HS and be inhibited by heparin, as distinct from human platelet heparanase, which cleaved both substrates [Nakajima, Irimura and Nicolson (1988) J. Cell Biochem. 36, 157-167]. We recently reported the purification of human platelet heparanase and showed that the enzyme is a 50-kDa endoglucuronidase [Freeman and Parish (1998) Biochem. J. 330, 1341-1350]. We now report the purification and characterization of heparanase activity from highly metastatic rat 13762 MAT mammary adenocarcinoma and human HCT 116 colonic carcinoma cells and from rat liver using essentially the same procedure that was reported for purification of the human platelet enzyme. The rat 13762 MAT tumour enzyme, which has a native M(r) of 45 kDa when analysed by gel-filtration chromatography and by SDS/PAGE, was observed to be an endoglucuronidase that degraded heparin and HS to fragments of the same sizes as the human platelet enzyme does. N-deglycosylation of both the human platelet and rat 13762 MAT tumour enzymes gave, in each case, a 41-kDa band by SDS/PAGE analysis, demonstrating that the observed difference in M(r) between the platelet and tumour enzymes may have been due largely to differences in the relative amounts of N-glycosylation. Two peptides were isolated following Endoproteinase Lys-C digestion of both the human platelet and rat 13762 MAT tumour heparanases and were shown to be highly similar. Both the rat liver and human colonic carcinoma heparanases also degraded both heparin and HS to fragments of the same sizes as the human platelet enzyme does. Western-blot analysis of an SDS/PAGE gel using antibodies raised against human platelet heparanase demonstrated that human platelet, human tumour and rat tumour heparanases were immunochemically cross-reactive. In conclusion, because of the similarities in their sizes, substrate specificities, peptide sequences and immunoreactivities, we propose that heparanase activities present in human platelets, rat liver and in rat and human tumour cells are, in fact, mediated by a similar enzyme.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10455023      PMCID: PMC1220473     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biochem J        ISSN: 0264-6021            Impact factor:   3.857


  55 in total

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Authors:  W Schlechte; G Murano; D Boyd
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  1989-11-01       Impact factor: 12.701

2.  Immunopurification and characterization of human alpha-L-iduronidase with the use of monoclonal antibodies.

Authors:  P R Clements; D A Brooks; P A McCourt; J J Hopwood
Journal:  Biochem J       Date:  1989-04-01       Impact factor: 3.857

3.  Human mononuclear cells contain an endoglycosidase specific for heparan sulphate glycosaminoglycan demonstrable with the use of a specific solid-phase metabolically radiolabelled substrate.

Authors:  R F Sewell; P E Brenchley; N P Mallick
Journal:  Biochem J       Date:  1989-12-15       Impact factor: 3.857

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Authors:  J E Turnbull; J T Gallagher
Journal:  Biochem J       Date:  1990-02-01       Impact factor: 3.857

5.  Chemically modified heparins as inhibitors of heparan sulfate specific endo-beta-glucuronidase (heparanase) of metastatic melanoma cells.

Authors:  T Irimura; M Nakajima; G L Nicolson
Journal:  Biochemistry       Date:  1986-09-09       Impact factor: 3.162

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Authors:  L Jin; M Nakajima; G L Nicolson
Journal:  Int J Cancer       Date:  1990-06-15       Impact factor: 7.396

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Review 8.  Heparanases and tumor metastasis.

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Authors:  J E Turnbull; J T Gallagher
Journal:  Biochem J       Date:  1991-02-01       Impact factor: 3.857

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