Abstract

The lymphatic vessel endothelial receptor LYVE-1 is implicated in the uptake of hyaluronan (HA) and trafficking of leukocytes to draining lymph nodes. Yet LYVE-1 has only weak affinity for hyaluronan and depends on receptor clustering and higher order ligand organization for durable binding in lymphatic endothelium. An unusual feature of LYVE-1 not found in other HA receptors is the potential to form disulfide-linked homodimers. However, their influence on function has not been investigated. Here we show LYVE-1 homodimers are the predominant configuration in lymphatic endothelium in vitro and in vivo, and formation solely requires the unpaired cysteine residue Cys-201 within the membrane-proximal domain, yielding a 15-fold higher HA binding affinity and an ∼67-fold slower off-rate than the monomer. Moreover, we show non-dimerizing LYVE-1 mutants fail to bind HA even when expressed at high densities in lymphatic endothelial cells or artificially cross-linked with antibody. Consistent with these findings, small angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) indicates the Cys-201 interchain disulfide forms a hinge that maintains the homodimer in an “open scissors” conformation, likely allowing arrangement of the two HA binding domains for mutual engagement with ligand. Finally, we demonstrate the Cys-201 interchain disulfide is highly labile, and selective reduction with TCEP-HCl disrupts LYVE-1 homodimers, ablating HA binding. These findings reveal binding is dependent not just on clustering but also on the biochemical properties of LYVE-1 homodimers. They also mark LYVE-1 as the first Link protein superfamily member requiring covalent homodimerization for function and suggest the interchain disulfide acts as a redox switch in vivo.

Highlights

  • Initial lymphatic vessels are composed largely of specialized endothelial cells that are adapted for the uptake of fluid, cells, and macromolecules from the interstitium and their transport to draining lymph nodes [1,2,3]

  • We reveal that disruption of the Cys-201 disulfide bridge in the homodimer by site-directed mutagenesis ablates HA binding in primary lymphatic endothelial cells and that binding cannot be reconstituted by the monomer even at the highest levels of surface expression or by artificial cross-linking with LYVE-1 antibody

  • LYVE-1 Is Expressed Predominantly as Homodimers in Primary Lymphatic Endothelium—The original cloning and sequencing of hLYVE-1 cDNA revealed a single unpaired cysteine (Cys-201) near the base of the O-glycosylated membrane stalk region that is conserved in all vertebrate sequences with the exception of fish and Amphibia [4, 18], indicating the potential for LYVE-1 to form homodimers through intermolecular disulfide bonding

Read more

Summary

Edited by Amanda Fosang

The lymphatic vessel endothelial receptor LYVE-1 is implicated in the uptake of hyaluronan (HA) and trafficking of leukocytes to draining lymph nodes. We show non-dimerizing LYVE-1 mutants fail to bind HA even when expressed at high densities in lymphatic endothelial cells or artificially crosslinked with antibody Consistent with these findings, small angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) indicates the Cys-201 interchain disulfide forms a hinge that maintains the homodimer in an “open scissors” conformation, likely allowing arrangement of the two HA binding domains for mutual engagement with ligand. Unlike the other major Link superfamily HA receptors CD44 and the liver sinusoidal receptor known as Stabilin-2 or HARE [16, 17], LYVE-1 contains a single highly conserved unpaired cysteine within the glycosylated membraneproximal domain that is predicted to form an interchain disulfide bridge [4, 18] This feature delineates the receptor from all other Link module superfamily members, which function as single chain HA-binding proteins, albeit in some cases composed of tandemly repeated Link modules [8]. These findings uncover additional, unexpected layers of complexity in the regulation of LYVE-1 HA interactions and attest to their functional importance in supporting HA-mediated interactions in the lymphatic compartment

Results
Discussion
Experimental Procedures
Cell Culture
Recombinant Protein Purification
Surface Plasmon Resonance
Microtiter Plate HA Binding Assays
SAXS Analysis and Molecular Modeling
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call