Literature DB >> 2550475

Heparin-derived oligosaccharides: affinity for acidic fibroblast growth factor and effect on its growth-promoting activity for human endothelial cells.

T Bârzu1, J C Lormeau, M Petitou, S Michelson, J Choay.   

Abstract

The minimal structural requirements for the interaction of heparin with acidic fibroblast growth factor (aFGF) were investigated. Oligosaccharides (tetra- to decasaccharides) obtained by nitrous acid depolymerisation of standard heparin were separated by affinity chromatography on Sepharose-immobilised aFGF. The shortest fragment retained by the affinity column at 0.2 M NaCl and eluted at 1 M NaCl was a "regular" hexasaccharide, a trimer of the most abundant disaccharide sequence in heparin. More complex octa- and decasaccharides were also retained by the column. The oligosaccharides eluted by 1 M NaCl from the affinity column ("high-affinity" oligosaccharides) and those washed from the column at 0.2 M NaCl ("low-affinity" oligosaccharides) were compared for their capacity to protect aFGF from proteolysis and to potentiate its mitogenic activity. At a low ionic strength, all oligosaccharides tested, except the "regular" disaccharide, protected aFGF against trypsin and collagenase digestion. At higher ionic strength (greater than 0.2 M NaCl), only high-affinity oligosaccharides showed a protective effect. The high-affinity oligosaccharides (hexa- to decasaccharides) potentiated the mitogenic activity of aFGF, as measured by [3H]thymidine incorporation into DNA of human fibroblasts. The effect of the oligosaccharides on human endothelial cell proliferation was more complex: inhibition of proliferation was observed in the presence of serum and low concentrations of aFGF (1-5 ng/ml) and potentiation in the presence of higher concentrations of aFGF. The potentiating effect increased as a function of molecular size of the heparin fragments and, for a given size, as a function of the anionic charge of the oligosaccharide. Our results suggest that inhibition of cell proliferation by heparin may result from interference with an autocrine basic FGF-like activity.

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Year:  1989        PMID: 2550475     DOI: 10.1002/jcp.1041400320

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Cell Physiol        ISSN: 0021-9541            Impact factor:   6.384


  10 in total

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