1 research outputs found
Sulfated Hyperbranched and Linear Polyglycerols Modulate HMGB1 and Morphological Plasticity in Neural Cells
The objective of this study was to establish if polyglycerols
with
sulfate or sialic acid functional groups interact with high mobility
group box 1 (HMGB1), and if so, which polyglycerol could prevent loss
of morphological plasticity in excitatory neurons in the hippocampus.
Considering that HMGB1 binds to heparan sulfate and that heparan sulfate
has structural similarities with dendritic polyglycerol sulfates (dPGS),
we performed the experiments to show if polyglycerols can mimic heparin
functions by addressing the following questions: (1) do dendritic
and linear polyglycerols interact with the alarmin molecule HMGB1?
(2) Does dPGS interaction with HMGB1 influence the redox status of
HMGB1? (3) Can dPGS prevent the loss of dendritic spines in organotypic
cultures challenged with lipopolysaccharide (LPS)? LPS plays a critical
role in infections with Gram-negative bacteria and is commonly used
to test candidate therapeutic agents for inflammation and endotoxemia.
Pathologically high LPS concentrations and other stressful stimuli
cause HMGB1 release and post-translational modifications. We hypothesized
that (i) electrostatic interactions of hyperbranched and linear polysulfated
polyglycerols with HMGB1 will likely involve sites similar to those
of heparan sulfate. (ii) dPGS can normalize HMGB1 compartmentalization
in microglia exposed to LPS and prevent dendritic spine loss in the
excitatory hippocampal neurons. We performed immunocytochemistry and
biochemical analyses combined with confocal microscopy to determine
cellular and extracellular locations of HMGB1 and morphological plasticity.
Our results suggest that dPGS interacts with HMGB1 similarly to heparan
sulfate. Hyperbranched dPGS and linear sulfated polymers prevent dendritic
spine loss in hippocampal excitatory neurons. MS/MS analyses reveal
that dPGS-HMGB1 interactions result in fully oxidized HMGB1 at critical
cysteine residues (Cys23, Cys45, and Cys106). Triply oxidized HMGB1
leads to the loss of its pro-inflammatory action and could participate
in dPGS-mediated spine loss prevention. LPG-Sia exposure to HMGB1
results in the oxidation of Cys23 and Cys106 but does not normalize
spine density