Scheidegger P, Weiglhofer W, Suarez S, Console S, Waltenberger J, Pepper M S, Jaussi R, Ballmer-Hofer K
Institute of Medical Radiobiology of the University of Zürich and the Paul Scherrer Institute, CH-5232 Villigen-PSI, Switzerland.
Biochem J. 2001 Feb 1;353(Pt 3):569-78. doi: 10.1042/0264-6021:3530569.
HIV-1 expresses a multifunctional protein called TAT (trans-acting transcriptional activator), the function of which in vivo is tightly correlated with the incidence of Kaposi's sarcoma in AIDS patients. TAT is angiogenic and apparently binds to receptors specific for vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). Amino acids 46-60 of HIV-TAT, known as the basic peptide, have been shown to be responsible for its functional interaction with VEGF receptors. To characterize further the binding properties of this peptide, its coding sequence was fused to the reading frame of bacterial thioredoxin, allowing the production of large amounts of chimaeric polypeptides in bacteria in a biologically active form. Binding of chimaeric proteins to VEGF receptors was studied in vitro in endothelial cell cultures expressing either of the two receptors. Chimaeric thioredoxin proteins carrying the basic domain of TAT bound to both VEGF receptors with affinities similar to those of HIV-TAT or VEGF. Interestingly, these polypeptides competed only partially with VEGF for receptor binding, implying different binding sites for the TAT peptide and VEGF. This suggests that TAT binds VEGF receptors at new sites that might be useful targets for pharmacological intervention during pathological angiogenesis. The thioredoxin/basic-peptide chimaeras are functional agonists that mediate VEGF receptor signalling: (1) they stimulate the growth of endothelial cells; (2) together with basic fibroblast growth factor they cause tube formation of endothelial cells in collagen gels; (3) they induce blood vessel formation on the chicken chorioallantoic membrane; and (4) they activate VEGF receptor kinase and mitogen-activated protein kinase activity.
HIV-1表达一种名为TAT(反式作用转录激活因子)的多功能蛋白,其在体内的功能与艾滋病患者卡波西肉瘤的发病率密切相关。TAT具有促血管生成作用,且显然能与血管内皮生长因子(VEGF)的特异性受体结合。HIV-TAT的46 - 60位氨基酸,即所谓的碱性肽段,已被证明负责其与VEGF受体的功能相互作用。为了进一步表征该肽段的结合特性,将其编码序列与细菌硫氧还蛋白的阅读框融合,从而能够在细菌中以生物活性形式大量生产嵌合多肽。在表达两种受体之一的内皮细胞培养物中,对嵌合蛋白与VEGF受体的结合进行了体外研究。携带TAT碱性结构域的嵌合硫氧还蛋白与两种VEGF受体结合,其亲和力与HIV-TAT或VEGF相似。有趣的是,这些多肽仅部分与VEGF竞争受体结合,这意味着TAT肽段和VEGF具有不同的结合位点。这表明TAT在新位点结合VEGF受体,这些位点可能是病理性血管生成过程中药理学干预的有用靶点。硫氧还蛋白/碱性肽嵌合体是介导VEGF受体信号传导的功能性激动剂:(1)它们刺激内皮细胞生长;(2)与碱性成纤维细胞生长因子一起,它们导致内皮细胞在胶原凝胶中形成管腔;(3)它们诱导鸡胚绒毛尿囊膜上血管形成;(4)它们激活VEGF受体激酶和丝裂原活化蛋白激酶活性。