Affiliation:
1. National Glycoengineering Research Center, NMPA Key Laboratory for Quality Research and Evaluation of Carbohydrate-
based Medicine, Shandong University, Qingdao, Shandong, 266237, China
Abstract
Background:
It has been proven that vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) was involved
in the pathogenesis of prostate cancer. Cardin et al. found that by an alanine scan, the heparin-binding site on VIP was exactly the same sequence in VIP and its receptor. Therefore, heparin could
competitively block the binding of VIP and its receptor. However, the structure-activity relationship between heparin and VIP has not been reported, especially in terms of the sequence and sulfation patterns of heparin oligosaccharides upon binding to VIP.
Objective:
The binding process between heparin oligosaccharides and VIPA variety of experiments was designed to study the structure-activity relationship between heparin oligosaccharides
and VIP.
Methods:
Heparin was enzymatically digested and purified to produce heparin oligosaccharides,
and the structures were characterized by NMR. The binding capacity between heparin oligosaccharides and VIP was analyzed by GMSA and ITC experiments. The binding between heparin oligosaccharides and VIP was simulated using a molecular docking program to show the
complex. ELISA assay was used to investigate the effect of non-anticoagulant heparin oligosaccharides on the VIP-mediated cAMP/PKA signaling pathway in vitro.
Results:
The results indicated that both the length and the sulfation pattern of heparin oligosaccharides affected its binding to VIP. VIP could induce the expression of cAMP at a higher
level in PC3 cells, which could be regulated by the interaction of heparin oligosaccharides and
VIP.
Conclusion:
The binding between heparin oligosaccharides and VIP could block the binding between VIP and its receptor on tumor cells. Downloading the regulation of the expression level of
cAMP could possibly further affect the subsequent activation of PKA. These non-anticoagulant heparin oligosaccharides may block the VIP-mediated cAMP/PKA signaling pathway and thus exert
their antitumor activity.
Funder
National Key R&D Program of China
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.