Cancer and Vascular Biology Research Center, Rappaport Faculty of Medicine, Haifa, Israel.
FEBS J. 2010 Oct;277(19):3890-903. doi: 10.1111/j.1742-4658.2010.07799.x. Epub 2010 Aug 31.
Heparanase is an endo-β-D-glucuronidase capable of cleaving heparan sulfate side chains at a limited number of sites, yielding heparan sulfate fragments of still appreciable size. Importantly, heparanase activity correlates with the metastatic potential of tumor-derived cells, attributed to enhanced cell dissemination as a consequence of heparan sulfate cleavage and remodeling of the extracellular matrix and basement membrane underlying epithelial and endothelial cells. Similarly, heparanase activity is implicated in neovascularization, inflammation and autoimmunity, involving the migration of vascular endothelial cells and activated cells of the immune system. The cloning of a single human heparanase cDNA 10 years ago enabled researchers to critically approve the notion that heparan sulfate cleavage by heparanase is required for structural remodeling of the extracellular matrix, thereby facilitating cell invasion. Progress in the field has expanded the scope of heparanase function and its significance in tumor progression and other pathologies. Notably, although heparanase inhibitors attenuated tumor progression and metastasis in several experimental systems, other studies revealed that heparanase also functions in an enzymatic activity-independent manner. Thus, inactive heparanase was noted to facilitate adhesion and migration of primary endothelial cells and to promote phosphorylation of signaling molecules such as Akt and Src, facilitating gene transcription (i.e. vascular endothelial growth factor) and phosphorylation of selected Src substrates (i.e. endothelial growth factor receptor). The concept of enzymatic activity-independent function of heparanase gained substantial support by the recent identification of the heparanase C-terminus domain as the molecular determinant behind its signaling capacity. Identification and characterization of a human heparanase splice variant (T5) devoid of enzymatic activity and endowed with protumorigenic characteristics, elucidation of cross-talk between heparanase and other extracellular matrix-degrading enzymes, and identification of single nucleotide polymorphism associated with heparanase expression and increased risk of graft versus host disease add other layers of complexity to heparanase function in health and disease.
肝素酶是一种内切-β-D-葡糖醛酸酶,能够在有限的位置切割肝素硫酸侧链,产生仍然具有相当大小的肝素硫酸片段。重要的是,肝素酶活性与肿瘤衍生细胞的转移潜能相关,归因于肝素硫酸裂解导致细胞扩散增强,以及上皮细胞和内皮细胞下的细胞外基质和基底膜重塑。同样,肝素酶活性与血管生成、炎症和自身免疫有关,涉及血管内皮细胞和免疫系统激活细胞的迁移。10 年前克隆的单一人类肝素酶 cDNA 使研究人员能够批判性地认可肝素酶切割肝素硫酸对于细胞外基质结构重塑的观点,从而促进细胞侵袭。该领域的进展扩大了肝素酶功能及其在肿瘤进展和其他病理中的意义。值得注意的是,尽管肝素酶抑制剂在几个实验系统中减弱了肿瘤进展和转移,但其他研究表明肝素酶也以酶活性非依赖性方式发挥作用。因此,无活性的肝素酶被认为促进了原发性内皮细胞的粘附和迁移,并促进了信号分子如 Akt 和 Src 的磷酸化,从而促进基因转录(即血管内皮生长因子)和选定的 Src 底物(即内皮生长因子受体)的磷酸化。肝素酶酶活性非依赖性功能的概念得到了最近鉴定的肝素酶 C 末端结构域作为其信号转导能力背后的分子决定因素的充分支持。鉴定和表征缺乏酶活性但具有促肿瘤特性的人类肝素酶剪接变体(T5)、阐明肝素酶与其他细胞外基质降解酶之间的串扰以及鉴定与肝素酶表达和移植物抗宿主病风险增加相关的单核苷酸多态性,为肝素酶在健康和疾病中的功能增加了其他复杂性。