The in vivo bioactivity of vascular endothelial growth factor/vascular permeability factor is independent of N-linked glycosylation.

DH Walter, U Hink, T Asahara, E Van Belle… - … ; a journal of technical …, 1996 - europepmc.org
DH Walter, U Hink, T Asahara, E Van Belle, J Horowitz, Y Tsurumi, R Vandlen, H Heinsohn…
Laboratory investigation; a journal of technical methods and pathology, 1996europepmc.org
The carbohydrate moieties of glycoprotein hormones or growth factor molecules may have a
variety of effects that impact biological potency. Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF),
also known as vascular permeability factor (VPF), is a 45 kD heparin-binding, endothelial
cell (EC) specific mitogen with a putative N-linked glycosylation site. Recent studies have
shown that VEGF/VPF may successfully augment collateral development in animal models
of myocardial and hindlimb ischemia. The extent to which glycosylation of the 75 asparagine …
The carbohydrate moieties of glycoprotein hormones or growth factor molecules may have a variety of effects that impact biological potency. Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), also known as vascular permeability factor (VPF), is a 45 kD heparin-binding, endothelial cell (EC) specific mitogen with a putative N-linked glycosylation site. Recent studies have shown that VEGF/VPF may successfully augment collateral development in animal models of myocardial and hindlimb ischemia. The extent to which glycosylation of the 75 asparagine site affects the angiogenic properties of VEGF/VPF has not been studied in vivo. Specifically unaddressed to date is the concern that nonglycosylated VEGF/VPF may be less stable, and therefore characterized by a shorter half-life, reducing its utility for therapeutic angiogenesis. Accordingly, the purpose of this study was to investigate the extent to which posttranslational modification, specifically glycosylation, mofies the angiogenic properties of VEGF/VPF in vivo. Glycosylated (g+) recombinant human VEGF165 was purified from media conditioned by Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells. Nonglycosylated (g-) VEGF165 was expressed, purified and refolded from E. coli. The purity of both materials was assessed by silver-stained SDS/PAGE and characterized by the presence of a single amino terminal sequence as indicated by Edman degradation. Tryptic mapping by reverse-phase HPLC confirmed that the potential glycosylation site at 75 asparagine was occupied by N-linked carbohydrate for the Chinese hamster ovary-derived VEGF/VPF, but not for E. coli-derived VEGF/VPF. The mitogenic effects of Chinese hamster ovary-derived (g+) VEGF165 and E. coli-derived (g-) VEGF165 wre studied in vitro using microvascular EC. At concentrations of VEGF/VPF ranging from 10 (-4) to 10 (2) nM, both produced similar concentration-dependent effects on EC proliferation. For in vivo studies,(g-)(n= 8) and (g+)(n= 8) formulations of VEGF/VPF were administered to New Zealand white rabbits with unilateral hindlimb ischemia. For (g-) versus (g+) VEGF/VPF-treated groups, respectively, calf blood pressure ratio was 0.40+/-0.04 versus 0.37+/-0.04; angiographic score (of collateral vessels) was 0.37+/-0.04 versus 0.35+/-0.04; capillary density (capillaries/mm2) at necropsy was 246.9+/-21.5 versus 253.9+/-18.8; and tissue perfusion (colored microspheres) was 92.8+/-5.5 versus 90.30+/-13.47 (all p= ns). Moreover, intravascular Doppler-based analyses of resting, maximum, and endothelium-dependent flow was similar for (g-) and (g+) VEGF/VPF. These in vitro and in vivo findings establish that the potential for VEGF/VPF to stimulate therapeutic angiogenesis persists unaltered in the nonglycosylated state.
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