Human extracellular sulfatases use a dual mechanism for regulation of growth factor interactions with heparan sulfate proteoglycans.

bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology(2023)

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摘要
Membrane-associated heparan sulfate (HS) proteoglycans (PGs) contribute to the regulation of extracellular cellular signaling cues, such as growth factors (GFs) and chemokines, essential for normal organismal functions and implicated in various pathophysiologies. PGs accomplish this by presenting high affinity binding sites for GFs and their receptors through highly sulfated regions of their HS polysaccharide chains. The composition of HS, and thus GF-binding specificity, are determined during biosynthetic assembly prior to installation at the cell surface. Two extracellular 6- O -endosulfatase enzymes (Sulf-1 and Sulf-2) can uniquely further edit mature HS and alter its interactions with GFs by removing specific sulfation motifs from their recognition sequence on HS. Despite being implicated as signaling regulators during development and in disease, the Sulfs have resisted structural characterization, and their substrate specificity and effects on GF interactions with HS are still poorly defined. Using a panel of PG-mimetics comprising compositionally-defined bioengineered recombinant HS (rHS) substrates in combination with GF binding and enzyme activity assays, we have discovered that Sulfs control GF-HS interactions through a combination of catalytic processing and competitive blocking of high affinity GF-binding sites, providing a new conceptual framework for understanding the functional impact of these enzymes in biological context. Although the contributions from each mechanism are both Sulf- and GF-dependent, the PG-mimetic platform allows for rapid analysis of these complex relationships. Significance Statement:Cells rely on extracellular signals such as growth factors (GFs) to mediate critical biological functions. Membrane-associated proteins bearing negatively charged heparan sulfate (HS) sugar chains engage with GFs and present them to their receptors, which regulates their activity. Two extracellular sulfatase (Sulf) enzymes can edit HS and alter GF interactions and activity, although the precise mechanisms remain unclear. By using chemically defined HS-mimetics as probes, we have discovered that Sulfs can modulate HS by means of catalytic alterations and competitive blocking of GF-binding sites. These unique dual activities distinguish Sulfs from other enzymes and provide clues to their roles in development and disease.
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