| Literature DB >> 28486399 |
Nicolas Poupard1, Pamela Badarou2, Fabienne Fasani3, Hugo Groult4, Nicolas Bridiau5, Frédéric Sannier6, Stéphanie Bordenave-Juchereau7, Claudine Kieda8, Jean-Marie Piot9, Catherine Grillon10, Ingrid Fruitier-Arnaudin11, Thierry Maugard12.
Abstract
Heparanase is overexpressed by tumor cells and degrades the extracellular matrix proteoglycans through cleavage of heparan sulfates (HS), allowing pro-angiogenic factor release and thus playing a key role in tumor angiogenesis and metastasis. Here we propose new HS analogs as potent heparanase inhibitors: Heparin as a positive control, Dextran Sulfate, λ-Carrageenan, and modified forms of them obtained by depolymerization associated to glycol splitting (RD-GS). After heparanase activity assessment, 11 kDa RD-GS-λ-Carrageenan emerged as the most effective heparanase inhibitor with an IC50 of 7.32 ng/mL compared to 10.7 ng/mL for the 16 kDa unfractionated heparin. The fractionated polysaccharides were then tested in a heparanase-rich medium-based in vitro model, mimicking tumor microenvironment, to determine their effect on microvascular endothelial cells (HSkMEC) angiogenesis. As a preliminary study, we identified that under hypoxic and nutrient poor conditions, MCF-7 cancer cells released much more mature heparanase in their supernatant than in normal conditions. Then a MatrigelTM assay using HSkMEC cultured under hypoxic conditions in the presence (or not) of this heparanase-rich supernatant was realized. Adding heparanase-rich media strongly enhanced angiogenic network formation with a production of twice more pseudo-vessels than with the control. When sulfated polysaccharides were tested in this angiogenesis assay, RD-GS-λ-Carrageenan was identified as a promising anti-angiogenic agent.Entities:
Keywords: angiogenesis; anti-angiogenic; endothelial cells; heparanase; hypoxia; sulfated polysaccharide; λ-Carrageenan
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28486399 PMCID: PMC5450540 DOI: 10.3390/md15050134
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mar Drugs ISSN: 1660-3397 Impact factor: 5.118
Figure 1Structure of the three sulfated polysaccharides studied: λ-Carrageenan, Heparin and Dextran sulfate. Concerning the heparin structure, the glucuronic acid may be epimerized as iduronic acid along the chain and bear an O-sulfatation on the C-3 position.
Physicochemical characterization and biological activities of UF-Heparin and RD-GS polysaccharides. (a) Sulfation degree = mol sulfates/mol disaccharide. (b) Heparanase inhibition expressed as IC50 values (ng/mL) of inhibitors against heparanase (100 ng/mL). (c) Survival of HSkMEC cells exposed to compounds concentration of 250 µg/mL in complete OPTIMEM medium supplemented with 2% FBS for 48 h. * p ≤ 0.05.
| Polysaccharides | Mn (Da) | Sulfation Degree a | Heparanase Inhibition b (IC50 Values in ng/mL) | HSkMEC Cell Viability c |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| UF-Heparin | 16,412 | 2 | 10.7 | 68.9 ± 13.9% * |
| RD-GS-Heparin | 2716 | 1.4 | 147 | 85 ± 9% * |
| RD-GS-DextranS | 4710 | 0.9 | 61.5 | 84.2 ± 5.8% * |
| RD-GS-λ-Carrageenan | 11,396 | 1.1 | 7.32 | 89.2 ± 6.2% * |
Figure 2Determination of heparanase expression in both cell lysates and medium of HSkMEC, MDA-MB-231 and MCF-7 cells. (a) Western blot analysis of cell lysates (22.5 µg of total proteins) obtained from cells cultured under hypoxic or normoxic conditions for 48 h in 2% FBS or FBS-free medium. Bands were reported relative to the level of β-Actin. (b) ELISA quantification of heparanase in cell supernatant obtained from cells cultured under hypoxic or normoxic conditions for 48 h in 2% FBS or FBS-free medium. H indicates Hypoxia; N indicates Normoxia; “+” indicates that 2% FBS was present in the medium; “−“ indicates that the medium was FBS-free. Results are expressed as a relative heparanase release compared to the protein content in the cell lysate. Results are presented as the mean ± SD for triplicates.
Figure 3Effect of the addition of MCF-7 heparanase-rich supernatant on HSkMEC pseudo-vessels formation. Cells were plated in MatrigelTM in the presence (or absence) of 10 µL of heparanase-rich supernatant from MCF-7 cultured in FBS-free medium under hypoxia for 48 h. Capillary network formation was visualized using a Zeiss Axiovert 200 M fluorescent inverted microscope and monitored for 21 h. Angiogenesis was observed after 9.5 h under hypoxia in FBS-free medium: in the absence (a); or in the presence (b) of heparanase-rich MCF-7 supernatant. (c) Angiogenesis formation was followed over time with pictures taken every 2 h and by studying the number of pseudovessels, junctions, meshes and the size of the meshes (indicated in pixels). Results are presented as the mean ± SD for triplicates.
Figure 4Effects of heparanase inhibitors on the kinetics of HSkMEC pseudovessels formation and junctions between them. Cells were incubated with heparanase inhibitors (200 µg/mL) on Matrigel either in the presence (black columns) or absence (white columns) of MCF-7 heparanase-rich supernatant. Angiogenesis kinetic was assessed by: the determination of pseudo-vessels formed between 0 and 7 h (a); and junctions formed between 1.5 h to 7 h (b) with photos taken every 30 min. Results are presented as the slope of a linear regression realized with number of pseudo vessels and junctions determined at each time with the Image J software (see Supplementary Materials). (c) The number of pseudo vessels (±SD) formed at t = 9.5 h. Inhibition of the angiogenesis development is specified for each compound tested and indicated as a percentage missing compared to the blank values. Complete kinetics from 0 to 19 h are presented in Supplementary Materials.
Figure 5Comparison of the anti-angiogenic and anti-heparanase activities of studied sulfated polysaccharides. (a) The population comprising RD-GS-Heparin and RD-GS-DextranS has low anti-heparanase activity and anti-angiogenic activity. (b) The population comprising UF-Heparin and RD-GS-λ-Carrageenan has high anti-heparanase activity and high anti-angiogenic activity.