International Journal of Molecular Sciences (May 2022)

Sulfated Hyaluronan Binds to Heparanase and Blocks Its Enzymatic and Cellular Actions in Carcinoma Cells

  • Jia Shi,
  • Riku Kanoya,
  • Yurina Tani,
  • Sodai Ishikawa,
  • Rino Maeda,
  • Sana Suzuki,
  • Fumiya Kawanami,
  • Naoko Miyagawa,
  • Katsuhiko Takahashi,
  • Teruaki Oku,
  • Ami Yamamoto,
  • Kaori Fukuzawa,
  • Motowo Nakajima,
  • Tatsuro Irimura,
  • Nobuaki Higashi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23095055
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 9
p. 5055

Abstract

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We examined whether sulfated hyaluronan exerts inhibitory effects on enzymatic and biological actions of heparanase, a sole endo-beta-glucuronidase implicated in cancer malignancy and inflammation. Degradation of heparan sulfate by human and mouse heparanase was inhibited by sulfated hyaluronan. In particular, high-sulfated hyaluronan modified with approximately 2.5 sulfate groups per disaccharide unit effectively inhibited the enzymatic activity at a lower concentration than heparin. Human and mouse heparanase bound to immobilized sulfated hyaluronan. Invasion of heparanase-positive colon-26 cells and 4T1 cells under 3D culture conditions was significantly suppressed in the presence of high-sulfated hyaluronan. Heparanase-induced release of CCL2 from colon-26 cells was suppressed in the presence of sulfated hyaluronan via blocking of cell surface binding and subsequent intracellular NF-κB-dependent signaling. The inhibitory effect of sulfated hyaluronan is likely due to competitive binding to the heparanase molecule, which antagonizes the heparanase-substrate interaction. Fragment molecular orbital calculation revealed a strong binding of sulfated hyaluronan tetrasaccharide to the heparanase molecule based on electrostatic interactions, particularly characterized by interactions of (−1)- and (−2)-positioned sulfated sugar residues with basic amino acid residues composing the heparin-binding domain-1 of heparanase. These results propose a relevance for sulfated hyaluronan in the blocking of heparanase-mediated enzymatic and cellular actions.

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