The glycosaminoglycan (GAG) heparan sulfate (HS) plays a critical role in chemokine-mediated neutrophil recruitment and activation in the pathophysiology of a wide variety of inflammatory diseases. All chemokines exist reversibly as monomers and dimers, but remarkably very little is known regarding the molecular mechanisms and structural basis by which chemokine monomers and dimers bind GAGs, and how these interactions mediate in vivo function. Three major bottlenecks have stymied efforts to obtain this knowledge - i) heterogeneity due to chemokine monomers and dimers, 2) the complex diversity of naturally occurring GAGs, and 3) limitations to NMR and X-ray methods. In Project III, we vsdll develop methods to overcome these bottlenecks, and characterize the structural/molecular basis of HS binding for three neutrophil-activating chemokines: human IL-8 and NAP-2, and mouse KC. We will use this knowledge to design GAG/chemokine decoys and test their efficacy in various animal inflammation and xenograft models. Our Central Hypothesis is that differences in neutrophil recruitment must be due to differential GAG interactions, that chemokines' ability to exist as monomers and dimers in solution and in GAG-bound forms are coupled and tightly regulated, and that dysregulation in this process is directly responsible for the observed clinical symptoms. This hjrpothesis v^ll be tested by pursuing three Specific Aims, to: 1) characterize the molecular properties of HS binding to chemokine monomers and dimers; 2) determine the solution structures of HS-bound chemokine monomers and dimers; and 3) design and test GAG and chemokine decoys that should inhibit neutrophil recruitment in mouse inflammation models and in various xenograft-related assays and animal models (Project IV).
These Aims will be accomplished via 3 approaches: Strategy 1 - Using protein engineering methods, design and synthesize trapped chemokine monomers and dimers. Strategy 2 - Chemoenzymatic synthesis of size-defined, chemically homogeneous GAG. PL-I, who is an expert in this methodology, will synthesize the GAGs, including uniform and selectively labeled (first of their kind) ^^N and ^^C-GAGs that are critical for solution NMR structural studies. Strategy 3 -NMR structure determination using data from chemical shift perturbation, paramagnetic relaxation enhancement (PRE), residual dipolar coupling (RDC), ^^N-relaxation, and intermolecular NOE experiments. Novel methods include using selective ^^C-labeled GAG for RDC and spin-labeled GAG for PRE experiments.

Public Health Relevance

Major achievements from this work will be two fold - (1) an understanding of the basic structural/molecular principles by which GAGs bind chemokine monomers and dimers, and (2) identification of GAG-based inhibitors for chemokine-mediated inflammatory diseases.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
Type
Research Program Projects (P01)
Project #
4P01HL107152-06
Application #
9068303
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZHL1)
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
2016-06-01
Budget End
2017-05-31
Support Year
6
Fiscal Year
2016
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Virginia Commonwealth University
Department
Type
DUNS #
105300446
City
Richmond
State
VA
Country
United States
Zip Code
23298
Afosah, Daniel K; Verespy 3rd, Stephen; Al-Horani, Rami A et al. (2018) A small group of sulfated benzofurans induces steady-state submaximal inhibition of thrombin. Bioorg Med Chem Lett 28:1101-1105
Periasamy, Srinivasan; Lin, Chia-Hui; Nagarajan, Balaji et al. (2018) Mucoadhesive role of tamarind xyloglucan on inflammation attenuates ulcerative colitis. J Funct Foods 47:1-10
Joseph, Prem Raj B; Sawant, Kirti V; Iwahara, Junji et al. (2018) Lysines and Arginines play non-redundant roles in mediating chemokine-glycosaminoglycan interactions. Sci Rep 8:12289
Kishore, Bellamkonda K; Robson, Simon C; Dwyer, Karen M (2018) CD39-adenosinergic axis in renal pathophysiology and therapeutics. Purinergic Signal 14:109-120
Boothello, Rio S; Patel, Nirmita J; Sharon, Chetna et al. (2018) A Unique Non-Saccharide Mimetic of Heparin Hexasaccharide Inhibits Colon Cancer Stem Cells via p38 MAP Kinase Activation. Mol Cancer Ther :
Abdel Aziz, May H; Desai, Umesh R (2018) Novel heparin mimetics reveal cooperativity between exosite 2 and sodium-binding site of thrombin. Thromb Res 165:61-67
Sepuru, Krishna Mohan; Iwahara, Junji; Rajarathnam, Krishna (2018) Direct detection of lysine side chain NH3+ in protein-heparin complexes using NMR spectroscopy. Analyst 143:635-638
Sepuru, Krishna Mohan; Nagarajan, Balaji; Desai, Umesh R et al. (2018) Structural basis, stoichiometry, and thermodynamics of binding of the chemokines KC and MIP2 to the glycosaminoglycan heparin. J Biol Chem 293:17817-17828
Gangji, Rahaman Navaz; Sankaranarayanan, Nehru Viji; Elste, James et al. (2018) Inhibition of Herpes Simplex Virus-1 Entry into Human Cells by Nonsaccharide Glycosaminoglycan Mimetics. ACS Med Chem Lett 9:797-802
Rajarathnam, Krishna; Sepuru, Krishna Mohan; Joseph, Prem Raj B et al. (2018) Glycosaminoglycan Interactions Fine-Tune Chemokine-Mediated Neutrophil Trafficking: Structural Insights and Molecular Mechanisms. J Histochem Cytochem 66:229-239

Showing the most recent 10 out of 151 publications