Abstract

Pigment epithelium-derived factor (PEDF) is a multifunctional serpin with antitumorigenic, antimetastatic, and differentiating activities. PEDF is found within tissues rich in the glycosaminoglycan hyaluronan (HA), and its amino acid sequence contains putative HA-binding motifs. We show that PEDF coprecipitation with glycosaminoglycans in media conditioned by human retinoblastoma Y-79 cells decreased after pretreatments with hyaluronidase, implying an association between HA and PEDF. Direct binding of human recombinant PEDF to highly purified HA was demonstrated by coprecipitation in the presence of cetylpyridinium chloride. Binding of PEDF to HA was concentration-dependent and saturable. The PEDF-HA interactions were sensitive to increasing NaCl concentrations, indicating an ionic nature of these interactions and having affinity higher than PEDF-heparin. Competition assays showed that PEDF can bind heparin and HA simultaneously. PEDF chemically modified with fluorescein retained the capacity for interacting with HA but lacked heparin affinity, suggesting one or more distinct HA-binding regions on PEDF. The HA-binding region was examined by site-directed mutagenesis. Single-point and cumulative alterations at basic residues within the putative HA-binding motif K189A/K191A/R194A/K197A drastically reduced the HA-binding activity without affecting heparin- or collagen I binding of PEDF. Cumulative alterations at sites critical for heparin binding (K146A/K147A/R149A) decreased HA affinity but not collagen I binding. Thus these clusters of basic residues (BXBXXBXXB and BX3AB2XB motifs) in PEDF are functional regions for binding HA. In the spatial PEDF structure they are located in distinct areas away from the collagen-binding site. The HA-binding activity of PEDF may contribute to deposition in the extracellular matrix and to its reported antitumor/antimetastatic effects.

Highlights

  • We show that Pigment epithelium-derived factor (PEDF) coprecipitation with glycosaminoglycans in media conditioned by human retinoblastoma Y-79 cells decreased after pretreatments with hyaluronidase, implying an association between HA and PEDF

  • PEDF Affinity for HA Secreted by Retinoblastoma Y-79 Cells— We examined the presence of HA in media conditioned by retinoblastoma Y-79 cells by fluorophore-assisted carbohydrate electrophoresis, a procedure for the qualitative and quantitative analysis of glycosaminoglycans

  • Electrophoretic patterns of aminoacrodone HCl (AMAC)-labeled carbohydrates from media from two different batches of Y-79 cells (Fig. 1A) showed the presence of ⌬DiHA, specific products of HA, which were absent in media not conditioned by Y-79 cells

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Summary

Introduction

Cumulative alterations at sites critical for heparin binding (K146A/K147A/R149A) decreased HA affinity but not collagen I binding These clusters of basic residues (BXBXXBXXB and BX3AB2XB motifs) in PEDF are functional regions for binding HA. Hyaluronan (hyaluronic acid, HA) is a non-sulfated glycosaminoglycan consisting of 2,000 –25,000 repeating disaccharide subunits of glucuronic acid and N-acetylglucosamine It was discovered in the vitreous of the bovine eye, but is known to be ubiquitously distributed and is recognized as the major glycosaminoglycan type present in the extracellular matrix [1]. PEDF was discovered as a retinal pigment epithelium-derived differentiation factor for human retinoblastoma cells [10], it exhibits several other activities in and outside of the eye. Hyaluronan-binding Site in PEDF receptors on the surface of cells [4], but little is known about the mechanisms that govern the cellular events for the PEDF antitumor activity

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