Biology Open (Sep 2014)

RANTES/CCL5 mediated-biological effects depend on the syndecan-4/PKCα signaling pathway

  • Loïc Maillard,
  • Naoaki Saito,
  • Hanna Hlawaty,
  • Véronique Friand,
  • Nadine Suffee,
  • Fanny Chmilewsky,
  • Oualid Haddad,
  • Christelle Laguillier,
  • Erwan Guyot,
  • Takehiko Ueyama,
  • Olivier Oudar,
  • Angela Sutton,
  • Nathalie Charnaux

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1242/bio.20148227
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 10
pp. 995 – 1004

Abstract

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The perpetuation of angiogenesis is involved in certain chronic inflammatory diseases. The accelerated neovascularisation may result from an inflammatory status with a response of both endothelial cells and monocytes to inflammatory mediators such as chemokines. We have previously described in vitro and in vivo the pro-angiogenic effects of the chemokine Regulated on Activation, Normal T Cell Expressed and Secreted (RANTES)/CCL5. The effects of RANTES/CCL5 may be related to its binding to G protein-coupled receptors and to proteoglycans such as syndecan-1 and -4. The aim of this study was to evaluate the functionality of syndecan-4 as a co-receptor of RANTES/CCL5 by the use of mutated syndecan-4 constructs. Our data demonstrate that site-directed mutations in syndecan-4 modify RANTES/CCL5 biological activities in endothelial cells. The SDC4S179A mutant, associated with an induced protein kinase C (PKC)α activation, leads to higher RANTES/CCL5 pro-angiogenic effects, whereas the SDC4L188QQ and the SDC4A198del mutants, leading to lower phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) binding or to lower PDZ protein binding respectively, are associated with reduced RANTES/CCL5 cellular effects. Moreover, our data highlight that the intracellular domain of SDC-4 is involved in RANTES/CCL5-induced activation of the PKCα signaling pathway and biological effect. As RANTES/CCL5 is involved in various physiopathological processes, the development of a new therapeutic strategy may be reliant on the mechanism by which RANTES/CCL5 exerts its biological activities, for example by targeting the binding of the chemokine to its proteoglycan receptor.

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