Angiomodulin (AGM/TAF/mac25) is a 30-kDa glycoprotein that was identified as an integrin-independent cell adhesion protein secreted by human bladder carcinoma cells. AGM is highly accumulated in small blood vessels of tumor tissues. In the present study, we attempted to identify the cell surface receptor and the cell-binding site of AGM using ECV-304 human vascular endothelial cells and BALB/c3T3 mouse fibroblasts. Heparin, heparan sulfate, and dextran sulfate, but not chondroitin sulfate, inhibited both adhesion of the two cell lines to AGM-coated plates and binding of AGM to these cells. Treatment of cells with heparinase, but not chondroitinase, inhibited both cell adhesion to AGM and AGM binding to cells. These results strongly suggested that heparan sulfates are the major receptor for AGM. Furthermore, we determined a 20-amino acid sequence within AGM molecule as its major cell-binding site. The synthetic peptide for the cell-binding sequence showed cell adhesion activity comparable to that of AGM, and the activity was inhibited by heparin and heparan sulfate. The peptide competitively inhibited cell adhesion to AGM and the binding of AGM to cells. These results indicated that AGM binds to cells through interaction of the identified cell-binding sequence with heparan sulfates on cell surface. It was also found that the heparan sulfate-binding peptide inhibited the formation of capillary tube-like structures of vascular endothelial cells in culture.
Angiomodulin (AGM/TAF/mac25) is a 30-kDa glycoprotein that was identified as an integrin-independent cell adhesion protein secreted by human bladder carcinoma cells. AGM is highly accumulated in small blood vessels of tumor tissues. In the present study, we attempted to identify the cell surface receptor and the cell-binding site of AGM using ECV-304 human vascular endothelial cells and BALB/c3T3 mouse fibroblasts. Heparin, heparan sulfate, and dextran sulfate, but not chondroitin sulfate, inhibited both adhesion of the two cell lines to AGM-coated plates and binding of AGM to these cells. Treatment of cells with heparinase, but not chondroitinase, inhibited both cell adhesion to AGM and AGM binding to cells. These results strongly suggested that heparan sulfates are the major receptor for AGM. Furthermore, we determined a 20-amino acid sequence within AGM molecule as its major cell-binding site. The synthetic peptide for the cell-binding sequence showed cell adhesion activity comparable to that of AGM, and the activity was inhibited by heparin and heparan sulfate. The peptide competitively inhibited cell adhesion to AGM and the binding of AGM to cells. These results indicated that AGM binds to cells through interaction of the identified cell-binding sequence with heparan sulfates on cell surface. It was also found that the heparan sulfate-binding peptide inhibited the formation of capillary tube-like structures of vascular endothelial cells in culture.
Ladsin is a laminin-like cell-adhesive scatter factor with potent cell motility-stimulating ability and was purified from serum-free conditioned medium of a malignant human gastric adenocarcinoma cell line STKM-1. To test its possible role in tumor angiogenesis, we investigated its effect on primary culture of endothelial cells (human umbilical vein endothelial cells) and endothelial cell line ECV304 in this study. Cell adhesion and motility effects of ladsin were observed in both types of endothelial cells. In cell-attachment assay, ladsin interacted with integrin alpha 3 beta 1 that was expressed on the endothelial cell surface. In Boyden chambers, ladsin stimulated both directed and random migration of ECV304 cells. Ladsin induced repair of artificial wounds generated in ECV304 cell monolayers by stimulating cell migration. Ladsin did not affect the growth rate of ECV304 cells at a low cell density but significantly increased the saturation cell density. These results suggest that ladsin may be involved in the adhesion and migration of endothelial cells under some physiological and pathological conditions.
Recently we have demonstrated that the growth of Kagura-2 cells established from aflatoxin B1 (AFB1)-induced rat hepatoma was markedly stimulated by glucocorticoids (GCs). To investigate a possible role of GCs in the growth of Kagura-2 cells, we studied the effect of conditioned medium (CM) prepared from Kagura-2 cells on the neuronal differentiation of pheochromocytoma (PC12) cells. Kagura-2 cell-CM caused in PC12 cells a number of physiological changes which mimic the nonreplicating sympathetic neuron-like cells, including induction of neurite extension and acetylcholinesterase activity. The neuronal differentiation factor(s) in CM were inactivated by the treatments of trypsin, acetic acid, dithiothreitol and heat. The molecular weights of factor(s) ranged from 6,000 to 14,000 on the basis of experiments using various molecular weight cutoff dialysis tubing and gel filtration.
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