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Heparin Modulates the Mitogenic Activity of Fibroblast Growth Factor by Inducing Dimerization of its Receptor. A 3D View by Using NMR
Authors:Dr. Lidia Nieto  Dr. Ángeles Canales  Dr. Israel S. Fernández  Dr. Elena Santillana  Dr. Rocío González‐Corrochano  Dr. Mariano Redondo‐Horcajo  Prof. F. Javier Cañada  Dr. Pedro Nieto  Prof. Manuel Martín‐Lomas  Prof. Guillermo Giménez‐Gallego  Prof. Jesús Jiménez‐Barbero
Affiliation:1. Dept. of Chemical & Physical Biology, Centro de Investigaciones Biológicas, Ramiro de Maeztu 9, 28040 Madrid (Spain);2. Dept. Química Orgánica I, Fac. Ciencias Químicas, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Avenida Complutense s/n, 28040 Madrid (Spain);3. Glycosystems Laboratory, Instituto de Investigaciones Químicas, CSIC‐US, Americo Vespucio 49, 41092 Sevilla (Spain);4. Biofunctional Nanomaterials Dept., CICbiomaGUNE, 2009, Paseo Marimon 182, 20009 San Sebastian (Spain)
Abstract:
In vitro mitogenesis assays have shown that sulfated glycosaminoglycans (GAGs; heparin and heparan sulfate) cause an enhancement of the mitogenic activity of fibroblast growth factors (FGFs). Herein, we report that the simultaneous presence of FGF and the GAG is not an essential requisite for this event to take place. Indeed, preincubation with heparin (just before FGF addition) of cells lacking heparan sulfate produced an enhancing effect equivalent to that observed when the GAG and the protein are simultaneously added. A first structural characterization of this effect by analytical ultracentrifugation of a soluble preparation of the heparin‐binding domain of fibroblast growth factor receptor 2 (FGFR2) and a low molecular weight (3 kDa) heparin showed that the GAG induces dimerization of FGFR2. To derive a high resolution structural picture of this molecular recognition process, the interactions of a soluble heparin‐binding domain of FGFR2 with two different homogeneous, synthetic, and mitogenically active sulfated GAGs were analyzed by NMR spectroscopy. These studies, assisted by docking protocols and molecular dynamics simulations, have demonstrated that the interactions of these GAGs with the soluble heparin‐binding domain of FGFR induces formation of an FGFR dimer; its architecture is equivalent to that in one of the two distinct crystallographic structures of FGFR in complex with both heparin and FGF1. This preformation of the FGFR dimer (with similar topology to that of the signaling complex) should favor incorporation of the FGF component to form the final assemblage of the signaling complex, without major entropy penalty. This cascade of events is probably at the heart of the observed activating effect of heparin in FGF‐driven mitogenesis.
Keywords:fibroblast growth factor  fibroblast growth factor receptor  heparin  molecular recognition  NMR spectroscopy
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