Perlecan, a ubiquitous basement membrane heparan sulfate proteoglycan, plays key roles in blood vessel growth and structural integrity. We discovered that the C terminus of perlecan potently inhibited four aspects of angiogenesis: endothelial cell migration, collagen-induced endothelial tube morphogenesis, and blood vessel growth in the chorioallantoic membrane and in Matrigel plug assays. The C terminus of perlecan was active at nanomolar concentrations and blocked endothelial cell adhesion to fibronectin and type I collagen, without directly binding to either protein; henceforth we have named it “endorepellin.” We also found that endothelial cells possess a significant number of high affinity (K d of 11 nm) binding sites for endorepellin and that endorepellin binds endostatin and counteracts its anti-angiogenic effects. Thus, endorepellin represents a novel anti-angiogenic product, which may retard tumor neovascularization and hence tumor growth in vivo.
Endorepellin, a Novel Inhibitor of Angiogenesis Derived from the C Terminus of Perlecan*
M. Mongiat,Shawn M. Sweeney,J. S. San Antonio,Jian-Lin Fu,R. Iozzo
Published 2003 in Journal of Biological Chemistry
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- Publication year
2003
- Venue
Journal of Biological Chemistry
- Publication date
2003-02-07
- Fields of study
Biology, Medicine
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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