| Literature DB >> 19002078 |
Chiara Urbinati1, Paola Chiodelli, Marco Rusnati.
Abstract
Polyanionic macromolecules are extremely abundant both in the extracellular environment and inside the cell, where they are readily accessible to many proteins for interactions that play a variety of biological roles. Among polyanions, heparin, heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGs) and glycosphingolipids (GSLs) are widely distributed in biological fluids, at the cell membrane and inside the cell, where they are implicated in several physiological and/or pathological processes such as infectious diseases, angiogenesis and tumor growth. At a molecular level, these processes are mainly mediated by microbial proteins, cytokines and receptors that exert their functions by binding to HSPGs and/or GSLs, suggesting the possibility to use polyanionic antagonists as efficient drugs for the treatment of infectious diseases and cancer. Polysulfated (PS) or polysulfonated (PSN) compounds are a heterogeneous group of natural, semi-synthetic or synthetic molecules whose prototypes are heparin and suramin. Different structural features confer to PS/PSN compounds the capacity to bind and inhibit the biological activities of those same heparin-binding proteins implicated in infectious diseases and cancer. In this review we will discuss the state of the art and the possible future development of polyanionic drugs in the treatment of infectious diseases and cancer.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 19002078 PMCID: PMC6245429 DOI: 10.3390/molecules13112758
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Distribution of natural polyanions.
| compartment | polyanions |
|---|---|
| free GAGs and GSLs, proteoglycans | |
| membrane-associated proteoglycans and GSLs, NeuAc-bearing glycoproteins | |
| GAGs, proteoglycans, GSLs, RNA, DNA, ribosomes, phosphorylated proteins, actin, microtubules |
Figure 1Interplay of the biological processes mediated by biologic polyanions.
Figure 2Chemical structure of the prototypic PS and PSN compounds heparin and suramin.
Figure 3Polyanionic prodrugs affect different steps of the retroviral cycle.
PS/PSN that inhibit infections by viruses.
| PS compounds | target virus |
|---|---|
PI 88, phosphomanno pentaose sulfate; Y-ART-4, nonatyrosine N- and O-1-9-decasulfate; PPS, pentosan polysulfate; PSS, poly(sodium 4-styrene sulfonate); CHIKV, Chikungunya virus; CMV, cytomegalovirus; DENV, Dengue virus; FMDV, foot-and-mouth disease virus; HAV, hepatitis A virus; HBV, hepatitis B virus; HCV, hepatitis C virus; HHV, human herpes virus; HPV, human papilloma virus; HSV, herpes simplex virus; HTLV, human T-cell leukemia virus; JEV, Japanese encephalitis virus; RSV, respiratory syncytial virus; RTV, rotavirus; RV, rubella virus; SFSV, sanfly fever sicilian virus; SFV, Semliki forest virus; VSV, vescicular stomatitis virus; VV, vaccinia virus; VZV, varicella zoster virus; YFV; yellow fever virus.
PS/PSN compounds that inhibit infections by bacteria and protozoa.
| PS compounds | target microrganism |
|---|---|
Figure 4Polyanionic prodrugs affect different steps of cancerogenesis.
PS/PSN compounds that bind AGFs and inhibit pro-angiogenic biological activities in vitro and/or angiogenesis in vivo.
| polysulfated compounds | target AGF |
|---|---|
| VEGF [ | |
| FGF2 [ | |
| VEGF [ | |
| VEGF [ | |
| FGF2 [ | |
| VEGF, FGF2 [ | |
| FGF2 [ | |
| FGF2 [ | |
| FGF2 [ | |
| FGF2 [ | |
| FGF2 [ | |
| VEGF, FGF2 [ | |
| VEGF, FGF2 [ | |
| VEGF, FGF2, HGF [ | |
| FGF2 [ | |
| VEGF [ | |
| FGF2 [ | |
| FGF2 [ | |
| VEGF, FGF2 [ | |
| VEGF [ | |
| FGF2 [ | |
| FGF2 [ | |
| FGF2 [ | |
| FGF2 [ | |
| VEGF [ | |
| VEGF, PDGF [ | |
| FGF2 [ |
Features shared by polyanionic HSPGs and GSLs.
| Feature | HSPGs | GSLs |
|---|---|---|
| capacity to bind multiple proteins (via their negatively charged carboxyl or sulfated groups, respectively) | [ | [ |
| protection of bound proteins from proteolitic degradation | [ | [ |
| receptor/coreceptor function for AGFs and tumor growth factors (when cell membrane associated) | [ | [ |
| entry receptor for viruses (when cell membrane associated) | [ | [ |
| mobilization/shedding from cell membrane in the body fluids | [ | [ |
| antagonist activity (when in their soluble form) | [ | [ |
| chaperone function (when in their intracellular form) | [ | [ |
Figure 5“Multivalent” binding capacity of polyanionic prodrugs.