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1 INSERM U428, Faculté des Sciences Pharmaceutiques et Biologiques, Université Paris V, Paris, France;
2 Laboratorio de Tecido Conjuntivo, Hospital Universitario and Departamento de Bioquimica Médica, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Requests for reprints: Jacqueline Tapon-Bretaudière, INSERM U428, Faculté des Sciences Pharmaceutiques, 4 avenue de l'Observatoire, 75270 Paris Cedex 06, France. Phone: (33)-1-56-09-23-32; Fax: (33)-1-56-09-33-93. E-mail: jacqueline.tapon-bretaudiere{at}hop.egp.ap-hop-paris.fr
| Abstract |
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Key Words: Fucosylated chondroitin sulfate endothelial cell FGF-2 angiogenesis
| Introduction |
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In vitro models using Matrigel (a reconstituted basement membrane) (5) or collagen gel (6) have been widely used to identify the different steps of angiogenesis, including the participation of cell surface and extracellular proteins in tube formation (7, 8) and the inductive effect of different growth factors. Among them, fibroblast growth factor-2 (FGF-2) plays a major role in angiogenesis. It increases production of proteases and their receptors necessary for basement membrane degradation; it stimulates proliferation, migration, and differentiation of endothelial cells to form tubes during vessel elongation; and it induces expression of adhesion molecules at the cell surface (912) and regulates actin cytoskeleton organization (13).
Proteoglycans are also major molecules involved in angiogenesis, mostly ascribed to highly sulfated heparan sulfate chains (14). These molecules possess a growth factor-dependent activity. Heparin, in the presence of heparin-binding growth factors such as FGF-1 and FGF-2, modulates endothelial cell proliferation (1518) and migration (19, 20) with mainly an enhancing effect on FGF-1 and an inhibitory effect on FGF-2 mitogenic activity. Besides heparin and highly sulfated heparan sulfate, few other sulfated polysaccharides can influence vascular endothelial cell growth such as sulfated fucans from marine algae (21). More recently, we demonstrated that fucosylated chondroitin sulfate (FucCS), a glycosaminoglycan extracted from the sea cucumber Ludwigothurea grisea, also modulates vascular cell growth (22). We found that this new glycosaminoglycan has a more favorable effect than heparin on vascular cell growth. It inhibits smooth muscle cell proliferation as well as heparin and it has a potent enhancing effect on endothelial cell proliferation and migration induced by FGF-2.
We now extend our studies on the FucCS to an in vitro angiogenesis model on Matrigel. The objective is not only to test the effect of this glycosaminoglycan on the formation of vascular tube, but also its role on actin cytoskeleton reorganization and integrin expression. In addition, comparison between the activity of native and chemically modified echinoderm glycosaminoglycan may allow us to identify the specific structural motifs in the molecule responsible for the biological activity, as we already demonstrated for its anticoagulant (23) and antithrombotic (24, 25) activities and for its effect on vascular cell proliferation (22). Finally, studies with this new polysaccharide may help us to delineate a clearer picture of the overall mechanisms involved in angiogenesis, including the specific contribution of endothelial cell proliferation, modifications of the extracellular molecules, and involvement of growth factors, besides the obvious practical implications derived from a well-characterized biological activity of a new molecule.
| Results |
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6 integrin subunits on HUVEC organization into tubular structures on Matrigel has been proposed (7). Therefore, we decided to investigate the possible effect of FucCS on the expression of these subunits by using flow cytometry and monoclonal antibodies (mAbs). FucCS (10 µg/ml) and FGF-2 (5 ng/ml) are able separately to increase
6 integrin subunit expression by HUVEC (Fig. 2, A and B
). After incubation of HUVEC with the echinoderm chondroitin sulfate plus FGF-2, a significantly higher expression (3-fold) of
6 is observed when compared with the control, which does not contain the polysaccharide (P < 0.0001) (Fig. 2B). Desulfation and defucosylation, but not reduction of the glucuronic acid residues, reduce markedly the effect of FucCS on expression of
6 integrin subunit by HUVEC.
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6 integrin subunit expression by HUVEC (data not shown).
FucCS and Actin Cytoskeleton Reorganization
Untreated HUVEC, incubated with 5% FBS for 72 h in the absence of FGF-2, display only a ring of polymerized actin at their membrane periphery when stained with fluorescein phalloidin and examined by fluorescence microscopy (Fig. 3A
). No difference is observed when it is compared with the HUVEC incubated with 10 µg/ml FucCS for 72 h (data not shown but similar result as in Fig. 3A). When HUVEC were incubated with FGF-2 alone (5 ng/ml) for 72 h, we observed a slight increase in their stress fibers at the membrane periphery (Fig. 3B), but if HUVEC were incubated simultaneously with native FucCS and FGF-2 for 72 h, we observed high amounts of actin stress fibers at their cytoplasms and a typical fibroblast-like morphology of the cells (Fig. 3C). When we replaced native FucCS by its carboxyl derivative, cells show a more diffuse pattern of actin staining, but they still retain the fibroblast-like shape (Fig. 3D). However, HUVEC incubated with the desulfated (Fig. 3E) or defucosylated (Fig. 3F) derivative from the echinoderm chondroitin sulfate show only a ring of polymerized actin at their membrane periphery as observed for control cells (Fig. 3A).
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Finally, if the inhibitor of Src kinase, PP2, is used, HUVEC show only a ring of polymerized actin at their membrane periphery (Fig. 4E) or a fibroblast-like morphology, together with small amounts of actin stress fibers (Fig. 4F), when incubated with FGF-2 alone or with the simultaneous addition of FucCS, respectively.
| Discussion |
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In the last few years, several authors, using a variety of experimental models, have reported that sulfated polysaccharides interfere with angiogenesis. These studies have been focused on two major aspects. One is the search for compounds with potent proangiogenic activity. Sulfated polysaccharides with this property may have a beneficial effect on pathological conditions where vascular walls are denuded of endothelial cells. In contrast, a sulfated polysaccharide capable of preventing angiogenesis may have an application as an antitumor compound. FucCS falls in the first category: its concomitant anticoagulant action (23) and its capacity to prevent venous (24) and arterial (unpublished data) thrombosis on animal experimental models increase even more the possible beneficial effect of this echinoderm glycosaminoglycan in pathological conditions affecting blood vessels.
Endothelial Cell Integrin Expression and Cytoskeletal Organization
Initially, we studied the expression of
6 integrin subunits induced by FucCS on HUVEC in the presence or absence of FGF-2. Interaction between endothelial cells and elements of their environment, such as basement membrane, is mediated by integrins. Again, FucCS added to the culture medium is enough to induce expression of
6 but not at similar levels as obtained by the simultaneous addition of the glycosaminoglycan and the growth factor.
Finally, we examined actin cytoskeleton reorganization induced by FucCS alone or combined with FGF-2. On differentiated endothelial cells, FGF-2 induces the formation of a complex between Src kinase and focal adhesion kinase (29), which will result in changes in actin cytoskeleton organization and is a prerequisite for cell migration. No significant modification of polymerized actin is induced by addition of the echinoderm glycosaminoglycan to the endothelial cells. It requires the simultaneous addition of FGF-2 to the culture medium to induce high amounts of cytoplasmic actin stress fibers, together with modification of endothelial cells to assume a typical fibroblast-like morphology.
H-7, wortmannin, and PP-2, which are respectively PKC, PI3K, and Src inhibitors, influence actin dynamics by decreasing stress fiber formation. When PI3K or Src inhibitors were added to the incubation medium containing FucCS and FGF-2, a few stress fibers were observed on the cell membrane periphery but the cell shape was fibroblast-like. In contrast, if the PKC inhibitor was used, only a diffuse staining pattern around the nucleus was observed in the cytoplasm with no fibroblast-like shape of the cell. So the PKC pathway appears predominant with regard to PI3K and Src pathways in the cytoskeleton organization induced by FGF-2 and enhanced by FucCS.
Overall, these combined results indicate that addition of FucCS to culture medium containing 5% FBS is not enough for the endothelial cells to undertake all the quantitative and qualitative modifications necessary to achieve in vitro angiogenesis on Matrigel. It induces expression of
6 integrin subunits at a low extension but not the changes in actin cytoskeleton organization. This last event requires the simultaneous addition of FGF-2, as previously demonstrated for endothelial cell proliferation (22). Furthermore, our results emphasize that, besides cell proliferation, angiogenesis involves a complex array of events, such as surface protein expression and actin cytoskeleton reorganization.
In conclusion, we observed an unequivocal effect of a FucCS extracted from sea cucumber in inducing in vitro angiogenesis. The effect requires the presence of sulfated fucose branches on the polysaccharide and is dependent on the presence of FGF-2. Heparin does not induce angiogenesis under the same experimental conditions used to test the FucCS. These results not only have obvious practical applications but may also help to delineate and distinguish closely related events on mammalian systems, such as modifications induced on the endothelial cells and their organization on new capillary vessels.
| Materials and Methods |
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Medium M199 (containing Hank's salts, L-glutamine, and 25 mM HEPES), RPMI 1640, antibiotics (penicillin and streptomycin), L-glutamine, HBSS with phenol red, PBS, HEPES, 0.05% trypsin/0.02% EDTA, and versene were from Life Technologies, Inc. (Cergy-Pontoise, France); HBSS without phenol red was from Eurobio (Ulis, France); FBS was from ATGC (Noisy-le-Grand, France); collagenase A was from Boehringer Mannheim (Mannheim, Germany); and gelatin was from Sigma Chemical Co. (St. Louis, MO). Growth factor-reduced Matrigel (without detectable FGF-2) was from Becton Dickinson Labware (Bedford, MA). Human recombinant angiogenic growth factor FGF-2 was from Valbiotech (Paris, France). Fluorescein phalloidin was from Interchim (Montluçon, France). Wortmannin, H-7, and PP2 were from Calbiochem (Meudon, France). Lab-Tek chamber slides were from Poly Labo (Strasbourg, France). Rat anti-human CD49f (
6 integrin subunit) mAb GoH3 (IgG2a) was from PharMingen (San Diego, CA); mouse anti-human CD29 (ß1 integrin subunit) mAb 2A4 (IgG1) was from Caltag (San Francisco, CA).
Cell Culture
Endothelial cells were isolated from human umbilical cords by enzymatic digestion with 0.1% collagenase according to the method described by Jaffe et al. (34) and modified by Giraux et al. (21). The cells were grown in equal volumes of M199 and RPMI 1640 supplemented with 20% FBS, 2 mM L-glutamine, 80 units/ml penicillin, and 80 µg/ml streptomycin. They were seeded into T25 flasks (BD Biosciences, Bedford, MA), precoated with 0.5% gelatin, and incubated in humidified 5% CO2 air at 37°C. They were fed every 2 days and transferred at a split ratio of 1:2 or 1:3 by treatment with PBS without Ca2+ and Mg2+, then detached by digestion with 0.05% trypsin/0.02% EDTA. Endothelial cells were identified by their typical cobblestone morphology. Third-passage endothelial cells were used throughout the study.
Preincubation of Endothelial Cells With FucCS and/or FGF-2
HUVEC were seeded in six-well plates precoated with 0.5% gelatin at a density of 3 x 105 cells/well. After 24 h, the culture medium was replaced by a new medium containing 10 µg/ml polysaccharide, supplemented with 5% FBS, with or without 5 ng/ml FGF-2; this latter medium was renewed 48 h later. After 72 h, HUVEC were detached with versene plus 0.01% collagenase, and digestion was stopped with buffered Hank's-2% FBS (4°C) supplemented with sodium bicarbonate. HUVEC were centrifuged at 200 x g for 8 min at 4°C and were then washed with buffered Hank's-2% before centrifugation at 200xg for 8 min at 4°C. After a second washing, HUVEC were used for angiogenesis assay on Matrigel and for quantification of integrin subunits using flow cytometry analysis (see below). The polysaccharide concentration used was chosen according to previous experiments on HUVEC proliferation and migration assays showing, in a range of concentrations from 0.1 to 100 µg/ml, a maximum enhancing effect of the FucCS on FGF-2 for concentrations of 1050 µg/ml. Heparin, in the same range of concentrations, had a slight negative effect in the proliferation assay and no effect in the migration assay (22).
Angiogenesis Assay on Matrigel
Plates of growth factor-reduced Matrigel (48 wells) were prepared by adding 150 µl/well of thawed Matrigel (10 mg/ml) to a refrigerated plate. The gel was allowed to solidify for 1 h at 37°C. Previously untreated HUVEC and HUVEC treated for 72 h with FGF-2 with or without polysaccharide (see above) were suspended in medium containing only 5% FBS (without FGF-2 or polysaccharide) and seeded on Matrigel (3 x 104 cells/well). Cell culture was carried out at 37°C in humidified air supplemented with 5% CO2 for 18 h. These cells were then fixed with 1.1% glutaraldehyde for 15 min. The Matrigel was dehydrated with 75% ethanol at -20°C for 1 h then with 96% ethanol for 3 min at room temperature. The cells were stained with Giemsa for 3 min. Tube formation was examined by phase-contrast microscopy.
Analysis of Integrin Subunits Using Flow Cytometry
Suspension of HUVEC cells (105 cells), pretreated with FucCS and/or FGF-2 (see above), was incubated for 30 min with mAb anti-human
6 or ß1 integrin subunit, conjugated to fluorescein or phycoerythrin. The HUVEC were then analyzed in a FACSCalibur flow cytometer (Becton Dickinson), equipped with an argon laser 5 W and operated at 200 mW power with a wavelength of 488 nm. Fluorescein and phycoerythrin fluorescences were detected by using 530/30 and 585/42 band pass filters, respectively. The values are expressed as means±SD of three independent experiments performed in duplicates.
Analysis of Actin Cytoskeleton Using Immunofluorescence Microscopy
HUVEC in 5% FBS were seeded on Lab-Tek chamber slides precoated with 0.5% gelatin (ranging from 2 to 3 x 104 cells/well). After 24 h, a new medium containing 5% FBS plus 5 ng/ml FGF-2 and/or 10 µg/ml polysaccharide was added to the cultures and renewed after 48 h, until a total of 72 h incubation period was completed. Then, the cells were washed with PBS, fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde for 15 min, permeabilized with 0.2% Triton X-100 in PBS for 10 min, and blocked with 3% BSA in PBS for 30 min. All these procedures were carried out at room temperature. Finally, actin cytoskeleton was stained by incubation with fluorescein phalloidin (1 unit/well) for 20 min. After extensive washing on PBS, the lames were mounted, the slides were examined and photographed under a Leica fluorescence microscope (Heidelberg, Germany).
For the experiments done in the presence of inhibitors, culture media containing a final concentration of 30 µM H-7, 300 nM wortmannin, or 2 µM PP2 were preincubated with the cells for 30 min and then 5 ng/ml FGF-2 and/or 10 µg/ml polysaccharide were added to the culture media. These media were renewed after 24 h and the cells were allowed to grow for an additional 48 h. Once a total 72 h incubation period was completed, the cells were analyzed for actin immunofluorescence as described above.
Statistical Analysis
To minimize the variations from one cord cell pool to another, the control in each assay was done on cells from the same pool of HUVEC.
The effects of the polysaccharides on HUVEC
6 integrin subunit expression were compared with an ANOVA test. For the flow cytometry assays, the comparison of each polysaccharide (native and modified) effect was performed with a Fisher's protected least significant difference test.
| Acknowledgements |
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| Notes |
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| References |
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1 for cell proliferation and PI3-kinase for alteration of cell shape and cell proliferation in corneal endothelial cells. Mol. Vis., 4: 2231, 1998.[Medline]
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