Lysolecithin-induced Alteration of Subendothelial Heparan Sulfate Proteoglycans Increases Monocyte Binding to Matrix

1995 
Abstract The cause and consequence of altered proteoglycans in atherosclerosis are poorly understood. To determine whether proteoglycans affect monocyte binding, we studied the effects of heparin and proteoglycan degrading enzymes on THP-1 monocyte adhesion to subendothelial matrix (SEM). Monocyte binding increased about 2-fold after SEM was treated with heparinase. In addition, heparin decreased monocyte binding to fibronectin, a known SEM protein, by 60%. These data suggest that SEM heparan sulfate inhibits monocyte binding to SEM proteins. We next examined whether lysolecithin, a constituent of modified lipoproteins, affects endothelial heparan sulfate proteoglycan (HSPG) production and monocyte binding. Lysolecithin (10-200 μM) decreased total SO4 in SEM (20-75%). 2-fold more monocytes bound to SEM from lysolecithin treated cells than to control SEM. Heparinase treatment did not further increase monocyte binding to lysolecithin-treated SEM. HSPG degrading activity was found in medium from lysolecithin-treated but not control cells. SO4-labeled products obtained from labeled matrix treated with lysolecithin-conditioned medium were similar in size to those generated by heparinase. These data suggest that lysolecithin-treated endothelial cells secrete a heparanase-like activity. We hypothesize that decreased vessel wall HSPG, as occurs in atherogenic conditions, allows increased monocyte retention within the vessel and is due to the actions of an endothelial heparanase.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    54
    References
    50
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []