Modulation of Microvascular Signaling by Heparan Sulfate Matrix: Studies in Syndecan-4 Transgenic Mice

0301 basic medicine Membrane Glycoproteins Dose-Response Relationship, Drug Nitric Oxide Synthase Type III Microcirculation Myocardium Neovascularization, Physiologic Nitric Oxide Synthase Type II Mice, Transgenic Nitric Oxide Adenosine Diphosphate Mice 03 medical and health sciences Animals RNA Fibroblast Growth Factor 2 Proteoglycans Endothelium, Vascular Heparitin Sulfate Nitric Oxide Synthase Cells, Cultured Protein Binding
DOI: 10.1006/mvre.2002.2399 Publication Date: 2003-11-06T12:22:27Z
ABSTRACT
The onset of tissue ischemia is associated with significant changes in the expression of heparan sulfate- (HS) carrying core proteins that, in turn, lead to alterations in composition of the extracellular HS matrix. Since HS can bind numerous growth factors and cytokines, such changes in the HS matrix content can have profound effects on the ability of these factors to interact with their target cells. To investigate the role of increased HS matrix content on microvascular function, we used alpha-myosin heavy chain (MHC) promoter to overexpress a HS-carrying core protein, syndecan-4, in cardiac myocytes in mice. Mice expressing the transgene (alpha MHC-S4) demonstrated a significant increase in nitric oxide (NO) release in the coronary effluent in response to fibroblast growth factor 2 (FGF2, 1 microg/mL) administration despite similar expression levels of NO synthase genes II and III (iNOS and eNOS, respectively). In vitro studies of coronary microvessels derived from alpha MHC-S4 mice demonstrated increased relaxation response to FGF2 compared to control mice. At the same time, vasodilator response to adenosine diphosphate (ADP) was significantly impaired in alpha MHC-S4 mice-derived microvessels. Addition of exogenous HS to microvessels derived from control mice enhanced FGF2-induced vasodilation while inhibiting ADP-induced vasomotion. The vasomotor activity of the endothelial receptor-independent agent (A23187) and the endothelium-independent agent (sodium nitroprusside) was not affected by heparan sulfate. These results demonstrate that alterations in HS production have a profound and heterogeneous effect on endothelial receptor-dependent vasodilators and point to a novel role of the HS matrix in regulation of microvascular homeostasis.
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