Effect of Heparanase and Heparan Sulfate Chains in Hemostasis

2021 ◽  
Vol 47 (03) ◽  
pp. 254-260
Author(s):  
Yona Nadir

AbstractHeparanase, the only mammalian enzyme known to degrade heparan sulfate chains, affects the hemostatic system through several mechanisms. Along with the degrading effect, heparanase engenders release of syndecan-1 from the cell surface and directly enhances the activity of the blood coagulation initiator, tissue factor, in the coagulation system. Upregulation of tissue factor and release of tissue factor pathway inhibitor from the cell surface contribute to the prothrombotic effect. Tissue factor pathway inhibitor and the strongest physiological anticoagulant antithrombin are attached to the endothelial cell surface by heparan sulfate. Hence, degradation of heparan sulfate induces further release of these two natural anticoagulants from endothelial cells. Elevated heparanase procoagulant activity and heparan sulfate chain levels in plasma, demonstrated in cancer, pregnancy, oral contraceptive use, and aging, could suggest a potential mechanism for increased risk of thrombosis in these clinical settings. In contrast to the blood circulation, accumulation of heparan sulfate chains in transudate and exudate pleural effusions induces a local anticoagulant milieu. The anticoagulant effect of heparan sulfate chains in other closed spaces such as peritoneal or subdural cavities should be further investigated.

Biomolecules ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (5) ◽  
pp. 663
Author(s):  
Marek Z. Wojtukiewicz ◽  
Marta Mysliwiec ◽  
Elwira Matuszewska ◽  
Stanislaw Sulkowski ◽  
Lech Zimnoch ◽  
...  

Neoplastic processes are integrally related to disturbances in the mechanisms regulating hemostatic processes. Brain tumors, including gliomas, are neoplasms associated with a significantly increased risk of thromboembolic complications, affecting 20–30% of patients. As gliomas proliferate, they cause damage to the brain tissue and vascular structures, which leads to the release of procoagulant factors into the systemic circulation, and hence systemic activation of the blood coagulation system. Hypercoagulability in cancer patients may be, at least in part, a result of the inadequate activity of coagulation inhibitors. The aim of the study was to evaluate the expression of the inhibitors of the coagulation and fibrinolysis systems (tissue factor pathway inhibitor, TFPI; tissue factor pathway inhibitor-2 TFPI-2; protein C, PC; protein S, PS, thrombomodulin, TM; plasminogen activators inhibitor, PAI-1) in gliomas of varying degrees of malignancy. Immunohistochemical studies were performed on 40 gliomas, namely on 13 lower-grade (G2) gliomas (8 astrocytomas, 5 oligodendrogliomas) and 27 high-grade gliomas (G3–12 anaplastic astrocytomas, 4 anaplastic oligodendrogliomas; G4–11 glioblastomas). A strong expression of TFPI-2, PS, TM, PAI-1 was observed in lower-grade gliomas, while an intensive color immunohistochemical (IHC) reaction for the presence of TFPI antigens was detected in higher-grade gliomas. The presence of PC antigens was found in all gliomas. Prothrombin fragment 1+2 was observed in lower- and higher-grade gliomas reflecting local activation of blood coagulation. Differences in the expression of coagulation/fibrinolysis inhibitors in the tissues of gliomas with varying degrees of malignancy may be indicative of their altered role in gliomas, going beyond that of their functions in the hemostatic system.


Blood ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 90 (9) ◽  
pp. 3568-3578 ◽  
Author(s):  
John-Bjarne Hansen ◽  
Randi Olsen ◽  
Paul Webster

AbstractTissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI) is a serine protease inhibitor of the extrinsic coagulation system, synthesized in endothelial cells, which has recently been shown to play an important role in the regulation of activated coagulation factors at the endothelial cell surface. In the present study we investigated the subcellular localization and metabolism of TFPI in human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC). Immunocytochemical labeling of HUVEC with anti-TFPI showed specific labeling associated with the cell surface and with many intracellular organelles including the Golgi complex. Further characterization of these organelles was performed by colocalizing the anti-TFPI with 3-(2,4-dinitroanilino)′-amino-N-methyldipropylamine (DAMP; to demonstrate low pH), mannose phosphate receptor (endosomes), and LAMP 1 (late endocytic compartments). TFPI also colocalized with antibodies to the human transferrin receptor, a marker for early endocytic, recycling compartment. Endogenous TFPI colocalized with biotin in intracellular vesicles during endocytosis after biotinylation of the cell surface, which indicated that TFPI was being co-internalized with the surface biotin. The binding of exogenously added 125I-TFPI increased linearly to HUVEC over the concentration range of 0 to 32 nmol/L without saturation, the binding was not affected by up to a thousand-fold molar excess of unlabeled TFPI, and heparin inhibited the binding dose dependently. An intact C-terminal domain was important for the interaction between TFPI and the cell surface of HUVEC, because less than 10% of a C-terminal truncated form of TFPI (TFPI1-161 ) was bound after addition of equimolar concentrations of full-length TFPI. Exogenously added 125I-TFPI was not degraded in HUVEC during 4 hours at 37°C. The presence of TFPI in endocytic and recycling compartments support the hypothesis that endogenous, membrane-anchored TFPI could be internalized for subsequent recycling back to the cell surface.


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (10) ◽  
pp. 1787-1794 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas A. White ◽  
Tucker Johnson ◽  
Natalia Zarzhevsky ◽  
Cindy Tom ◽  
Sinny Delacroix ◽  
...  

AbstractThe antithrombotic surface of endothelium is regulated in a coordinated manner. Tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI) localized at the endothelial cell surface regulates the production of FXa by inhibiting the TF/VIIa complex. Systemic homozygotic deletion of the first Kunitz (K1) domain of TFPI results in intrauterine lethality in mice. Here we define the cellular sources of TFPI and their role in development, hemostasis, and thrombosis using TFPI conditional knockout mice. We used a Cre-lox strategy and generated mice with a floxed exon 4 (TFPIFlox) which encodes for the TFPI-K1 domain. Mice bred into Tie2-Cre and LysM-Cre lines to delete TFPI-K1 in endothelial (TFPITie2) and myelomonocytic (TFPILysM) cells resulted in viable and fertile offspring. Plasma TFPI activity was reduced in the TFPITie2 (71% ± 0.9%, P < .001) and TFPILysM (19% ± 0.6%, P < .001) compared with TFPIFlox littermate controls. Tail and cuticle bleeding were unaffected. However, TFPITie2 mice but not TFPILysM mice had increased ferric chloride–induced arterial thrombosis. Taken together, the data reveal distinct roles for endothelial- and myelomonocytic-derived TFPI.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 4038-4038
Author(s):  
Yona Nadir ◽  
Benjamin Brenner ◽  
Anna Zetser ◽  
Flonia Levy-Adam ◽  
Victoria Kaplan ◽  
...  

Abstract Background and objectives. Tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI) is a potent direct inhibitor of factor Xa and factor VIIa-tissue factor complex. In addition, TFPI was shown to be an inhibitor of angiogenesis and metastasis. Heparanase is an endo-beta-D-glucuronidase of 65 kDa that cleaves heparan sulfate chains on cell surfaces and in the extra-cellular matrix an activity that closely correlates with cell invasion, angiogenesis and tumor growth. The study hypothesis was that heparanase may reduce the level of TFPI or release it from the cell surface in an attempt to increase heparanase prometastatic potential. Material and methods. The effect of exogenous heparanase on TFPI expression and release to the medium was studied in HUVEC by immunoblotting, real time RT-PCR, and flow-cytometry. Human cell lines (MDA-MB-435 breast carcinoma; U87 glioma; HEK-293 embryonic kidney) were transfected to over express heparanase and the effect on TFPI was studied. TFPI expression was explored in heparanase transgenic mice by immunoblotting and immunostaining. Transfections with various modified forms of heparanase were used to further explore the effect of heparanase. Interaction between TFPI and heparanase was studied by co-immunoprecipitation analysis. Results. Heparanase was found to increase the release of TFPI to the medium, reduce the level of TFPI at the cell surface, and to up-regulate its expression in the cells. These results were verified in HUVEC, tumor cell lines, and in the animal model. The effect was independent of heparanase activity or interaction with heparan sulfate, and dependent on heparanase secretion. A protein co-interaction between TFPI and heparanase was found. Conclusions. Overall, a cell surface interaction is suggested in which heparanase impose increased release of TFPI from the cell surface to the medium, providing a local procoagulant and a systemic anticoagulant environment.


2008 ◽  
Vol 99 (01) ◽  
pp. 133-141 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yona Nadir ◽  
Benjamin Brenner ◽  
Sveta Gingis-Velitski ◽  
Flonia Levy-Adam ◽  
Neta Ilan ◽  
...  

SummaryHeparanase activity is implicated in cell invasion, tumor metastasis and angiogenesis. Recently, we have reported that heparanase stimulates tissue factor (TF) expression in endothelial and cancer cells, resulting in elevation of coagulation activity. We hypothesized that heparanase regulates other coagulation modulators, and examined the expression and localization of tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI) following heparanase over-expression or exogenous addition. Primary human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) and human tumor-derived cell lines were incubated with heparanase, or were stably transfected with heparanase gene-constructs, and TFPI expression and secretion were examined. Heparanase over-expression or exogenous addition stimulated TFPI expression by 2–3 folds. TFPI accumulation in the cell culture medium exceeded in magnitude the observed induction ofTFPI gene transcription reaching 5– to 6-fold increase. Extracellular accumulation of TFPI was evident already 60 min following heparanase addition, prior toTFPI protein induction, and correlated with increased coagulation activity. This effect was found to be independent of heparanase enzymatic activity and interaction with heparan-sulfate, and correlated with reduced TFPI levels on the cell surface. Data were verified in heparanase transgenic mice tissues and plasma. Interaction between heparanase and TFPI was evident by co-immunoprecipitation. Interaction of heparanase with TFPI resulted in its displacement from the surface of the vascular endothelium and in increased pro-coagulant activity. Thus, heparanase facilitates blood coagulation on the cell surface by two independent mechanisms:dissociation ofTFPI from the vascular surface short after local elevation of heparanase levels, and subsequent induction of TF expression.


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 348-348
Author(s):  
Cristina Lupu ◽  
Hua Zhu ◽  
Jonathan Wren ◽  
Florea Lupu

Abstract Abstract 348 Cardiovascular disease (CVD) and thrombotic complications (deep vein thrombosis/venous thromboembolism, DVT/VTE) represent major health problems, with men having higher rates of clinical events than women. Tissue Factor Pathway Inhibitor (TFPI) is the key natural inhibitor of coagulation: it neutralizes factor Xa (FXa) and inhibits tissue factor-factor VIIa (TF-FVIIa) in the presence of FXa. In vivo most of TFPI is in endothelial cells (EC), reversibly bound to yet unidentified receptors, and glycosyl phosphatidylinositol-floated in caveolae and/or lipid raft microdomains. Intravascular thrombosis occurs frequently in older people, especially associated with cancer, diabetes, or CVD. TF is directly involved in tumor hypercoagulability, angiogenesis and metastasis. Cell-associated TFPI is the most physiologically significant inhibitor of the TF-FVIIa- triggered coagulation pathway; nevertheless, very few mechanisms/factors that could regulate the natural expression of TFPI have been identified so far. Here we describe androgen treatment of EC as a novel way to preserve and/or enhance a healthy vascular function, particularly related to the regulation of TFPI-dependent anticoagulant function of the endothelium. Our hypothesis is that a yet uncharacterized protein encoded by C6orf105 is a novel regulator of TFPI expression and function in EC, both in native conditions and during androgen stimulation. “In silico” data mining using global meta-analysis of publicly available NCBI's Gene Expression Omnibus 2-channel human microarray datasets identified C6orf105 as highly co-expressed with TFPI and following a parallel co-regulation. The uncharacterized protein has 230-aa, Mr ∼27 kDa, 5–6 predicted transmembrane domains and has sequence similarities with members of the androgen-inducible genes family. We tentatively named it TFPI-Regulating Factor (TFPI-RF). Real-time qPCR and western blot confirmed robust expression of TFPI-RF in EC in culture (HUVEC and EA.hy926 hybrid cell line). By immunofluorescence (IMF) TFPI-RF appears both on the cell surface and intracellularly co-localizing with TFPI and caveolin-1 (cav-1). Post-transcriptional (siRNA) down-regulation of TFPI-RF decreased TFPI, both as protein (∼2-times) and as anticoagulant activity (∼3-fold), apparently by reducing the co-localization of the TF-FVIIa-FXa-TFPI complex with cav-1. Over-expression of TFPI-RF in HUVEC and EA.hy926 led to enhanced co-localization of TFPI-RF with TFPI, and increased TFPI mRNA and anticoagulant activity (∼2-times). Western blot of cellular fractions after extraction with Triton X-114 and temperature-induced phase separation revealed the presence of TFPI and TFPI-RF in detergent-insoluble fractions, which suggests predominant lipid raft association. IMF illustrates TFPI-RF co-clustering with TFPI and cav-1 or GM1 (raft marker) in live EC incubated with anti-TFPI antibody or Cholera Toxin-B, respectively. The effect of androgens was studied by incubating EC with 30 nM dehydrotestosterone (DHT) or equivalent testosterone-BSA (cell-impermeable). 1-h incubation led to 2-times enhanced TFPI activity, increased co-localization of the quaternary complex with cav-1 and TFPI-RF, and enhanced exposure of TFPI and TFPI-RF on the cell surface. 24-h treatment with DHT up-regulates the expression of both TFPI (2-fold) and TFPI-RF (3-fold), as well as the TFPI inhibitory activity against FXa. DHT failed to enhance TFPI activity in TFPI-RF siRNA EC. Our results reveal a novel mechanism of up-regulation of the anticoagulant activity of endogenous TFPI in response to physiological levels of androgen. While the precise role of androgens in the ageing process is unclear, it is believed that androgen replacement could have beneficial influence on the declining functions in the elderly. Our data could expand on the effects of androgens on the haemostatic function of the endothelium and discover new roles for novel proteins like C6orf105/TFPI-RF in enhancing the endothelial anticoagulant function. These may open possibilities to manipulate the cellular endogenous TFPI and/or other intrinsic factors to counteract pro-thrombotic states associated with CVD, DVT/VTE, sepsis and cancer. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


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