Low-sulphated oligosaccharides derived from heparan sulphate inhibit normal angiogenesis

1993 
Abstract Heparin, with or without the addition of an adrenocorticosteroid, can inhibit normal angiogenesis in the chick embryo chorioallantoic membrane. Low- or non-sulphated heparin fragments also have anti-angiogenic effect. Attempts to define a saccharide structure responsible for the anti-angiogenic effect implicated a -[GlcA beta 1,4-GlcNAc alpha 1,4]n-sequence. This structure represents the product of the initial polymerization reaction in heparin/heparan sulphate biosynthesis. It persists in the non-sulphated regions of heparan sulphate and also occurs in the Escherichia coli K5 capsular polysaccharide. The K5 polysaccharide, fragments thereof down to octasaccharide size and analogous N-acetylated fragments of heparan sulphate, all showed anti-angiogenic activity. Hyaluronan, however, with the isomeric -[GlcA beta 1,3-GlcNAc beta 1,4]n-structure was inactive. The anti-angiogenic activity of -[GlcA beta 1,4-GlcNAc alpha 1,4]n-containing saccharides was potentiated by the presence of L-iduronic acid and one or two O-sulphate groups in the non-reducing-terminal disaccharide unit. The anti-angiogenic effect of these non- or low-sulphated saccharides was unaffected by the addition of hydrocortisone. Endothelial cell surface-bound heparan sulphate proteoglycans may represent a pool of precursors of anti-angiogenic oligosaccharides which may be of primary importance in the regulation of angiogenesis.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    0
    References
    31
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []