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Lipo-Chitin Oligosaccharides, Plant Symbiosis Signalling Molecules That Modulate Mammalian Angiogenesis In Vitro

Lipochitin oligosaccharides (LCOs) are signaling molecules required by ecologically and agronomically important bacteria and fungi to establish symbioses with diverse land plants. In plants, oligo-chitins and LCOs can differentially interact with different lysin motif (LysM) receptors and affect inn...

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Autores principales: Djordjevic, Michael A., Bezos, Anna, Susanti, Marmuse, Laurence, Driguez, Hugues, Samain, Eric, Vauzeilles, Boris, Beau, Jean-Marie, Kordbacheh, Farzaneh, Rolfe, Barry G., Schwörer, Ralf, Daines, Alison M., Gresshoff, Peter M., Parish, Christopher R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4275186/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25536397
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0112635
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author Djordjevic, Michael A.
Bezos, Anna
Susanti,
Marmuse, Laurence
Driguez, Hugues
Samain, Eric
Vauzeilles, Boris
Beau, Jean-Marie
Kordbacheh, Farzaneh
Rolfe, Barry G.
Schwörer, Ralf
Daines, Alison M.
Gresshoff, Peter M.
Parish, Christopher R.
author_facet Djordjevic, Michael A.
Bezos, Anna
Susanti,
Marmuse, Laurence
Driguez, Hugues
Samain, Eric
Vauzeilles, Boris
Beau, Jean-Marie
Kordbacheh, Farzaneh
Rolfe, Barry G.
Schwörer, Ralf
Daines, Alison M.
Gresshoff, Peter M.
Parish, Christopher R.
author_sort Djordjevic, Michael A.
collection PubMed
description Lipochitin oligosaccharides (LCOs) are signaling molecules required by ecologically and agronomically important bacteria and fungi to establish symbioses with diverse land plants. In plants, oligo-chitins and LCOs can differentially interact with different lysin motif (LysM) receptors and affect innate immunity responses or symbiosis-related pathways. In animals, oligo-chitins also induce innate immunity and other physiological responses but LCO recognition has not been demonstrated. Here LCO and LCO-like compounds are shown to be biologically active in mammals in a structure dependent way through the modulation of angiogenesis, a tightly-regulated process involving the induction and growth of new blood vessels from existing vessels. The testing of 24 LCO, LCO-like or oligo-chitin compounds resulted in structure-dependent effects on angiogenesis in vitro leading to promotion, or inhibition or nil effects. Like plants, the mammalian LCO biological activity depended upon the presence and type of terminal substitutions. Un-substituted oligo-chitins of similar chain lengths were unable to modulate angiogenesis indicating that mammalian cells, like plant cells, can distinguish between LCOs and un-substituted oligo-chitins. The cellular mode-of-action of the biologically active LCOs in mammals was determined. The stimulation or inhibition of endothelial cell adhesion to vitronectin or fibronectin correlated with their pro- or anti-angiogenic activity. Importantly, novel and more easily synthesised LCO-like disaccharide molecules were also biologically active and de-acetylated chitobiose was shown to be the primary structural basis of recognition. Given this, simpler chitin disaccharides derivatives based on the structure of biologically active LCOs were synthesised and purified and these showed biological activity in mammalian cells. Since important chronic disease states are linked to either insufficient or excessive angiogenesis, LCO and LCO-like molecules may have the potential to be a new, carbohydrate-based class of therapeutics for modulating angiogenesis.
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spelling pubmed-42751862014-12-31 Lipo-Chitin Oligosaccharides, Plant Symbiosis Signalling Molecules That Modulate Mammalian Angiogenesis In Vitro Djordjevic, Michael A. Bezos, Anna Susanti, Marmuse, Laurence Driguez, Hugues Samain, Eric Vauzeilles, Boris Beau, Jean-Marie Kordbacheh, Farzaneh Rolfe, Barry G. Schwörer, Ralf Daines, Alison M. Gresshoff, Peter M. Parish, Christopher R. PLoS One Research Article Lipochitin oligosaccharides (LCOs) are signaling molecules required by ecologically and agronomically important bacteria and fungi to establish symbioses with diverse land plants. In plants, oligo-chitins and LCOs can differentially interact with different lysin motif (LysM) receptors and affect innate immunity responses or symbiosis-related pathways. In animals, oligo-chitins also induce innate immunity and other physiological responses but LCO recognition has not been demonstrated. Here LCO and LCO-like compounds are shown to be biologically active in mammals in a structure dependent way through the modulation of angiogenesis, a tightly-regulated process involving the induction and growth of new blood vessels from existing vessels. The testing of 24 LCO, LCO-like or oligo-chitin compounds resulted in structure-dependent effects on angiogenesis in vitro leading to promotion, or inhibition or nil effects. Like plants, the mammalian LCO biological activity depended upon the presence and type of terminal substitutions. Un-substituted oligo-chitins of similar chain lengths were unable to modulate angiogenesis indicating that mammalian cells, like plant cells, can distinguish between LCOs and un-substituted oligo-chitins. The cellular mode-of-action of the biologically active LCOs in mammals was determined. The stimulation or inhibition of endothelial cell adhesion to vitronectin or fibronectin correlated with their pro- or anti-angiogenic activity. Importantly, novel and more easily synthesised LCO-like disaccharide molecules were also biologically active and de-acetylated chitobiose was shown to be the primary structural basis of recognition. Given this, simpler chitin disaccharides derivatives based on the structure of biologically active LCOs were synthesised and purified and these showed biological activity in mammalian cells. Since important chronic disease states are linked to either insufficient or excessive angiogenesis, LCO and LCO-like molecules may have the potential to be a new, carbohydrate-based class of therapeutics for modulating angiogenesis. Public Library of Science 2014-12-23 /pmc/articles/PMC4275186/ /pubmed/25536397 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0112635 Text en © 2014 Djordjevic et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Djordjevic, Michael A.
Bezos, Anna
Susanti,
Marmuse, Laurence
Driguez, Hugues
Samain, Eric
Vauzeilles, Boris
Beau, Jean-Marie
Kordbacheh, Farzaneh
Rolfe, Barry G.
Schwörer, Ralf
Daines, Alison M.
Gresshoff, Peter M.
Parish, Christopher R.
Lipo-Chitin Oligosaccharides, Plant Symbiosis Signalling Molecules That Modulate Mammalian Angiogenesis In Vitro
title Lipo-Chitin Oligosaccharides, Plant Symbiosis Signalling Molecules That Modulate Mammalian Angiogenesis In Vitro
title_full Lipo-Chitin Oligosaccharides, Plant Symbiosis Signalling Molecules That Modulate Mammalian Angiogenesis In Vitro
title_fullStr Lipo-Chitin Oligosaccharides, Plant Symbiosis Signalling Molecules That Modulate Mammalian Angiogenesis In Vitro
title_full_unstemmed Lipo-Chitin Oligosaccharides, Plant Symbiosis Signalling Molecules That Modulate Mammalian Angiogenesis In Vitro
title_short Lipo-Chitin Oligosaccharides, Plant Symbiosis Signalling Molecules That Modulate Mammalian Angiogenesis In Vitro
title_sort lipo-chitin oligosaccharides, plant symbiosis signalling molecules that modulate mammalian angiogenesis in vitro
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4275186/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25536397
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0112635
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