New
discovery about role of sugar in cell communication
A research
team from Uppsala University has uncovered an entirely new
mechanism for how communication between cells
is
regulated.
By functioning like glue, a
certain type of sugar in the body can make cell
communication more effective and stimulate the generation of
new blood vessels.
The discovery paves the way for
the development of drugs for cancer and rheumatism, for
example. The study is being published on May 9 in the
prominent journal Developmental Cell.
Blood vessels are made up of
tubes consisting of endothelial cells, support cells, and
membranes in various layers. The inside of the vessel is
covered with endothelial cells. Blood is transported
throughout the body in blood vessels, providing tissues with
oxygen and nourishment. To carry out this assignment and to
form new blood vessels, it is necessary to have close
contact and communication between the various cells and
membranes of the blood vessels.
In order to study how cell
communication regulates the new generation of blood cells, a
research team from Uppsala University studied blood vessels
grown from embryonic stem cells from mice. By genetic
modification of the stem cells, these scientists can now
show that the production of the sugar molecule heparan
sulfate is an absolute requirement for the formation of
blood vessels.
"We made use of stem cells with
two types of genetic modifications. In the first we removed
the gene that produces the enzyme needed for sugar chains to
bind various growth factors. In the other modification we
removed the gene that produces the receptor for the growth
factor VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor)," says Lars
Jakobsson.
The first modification resulted
in cells with defective heparan sulfate and the other in the
cells' not being able to form the receptor for VEGF. Neither
of these two types of stem cells was able to generate blood
vessels on its own.
"To further study the role of
heparan sulfate in cells, we developed a model in which we
let the different stem cell modifications grow together. It
turned out that under these conditions the cells were able
to generate lots of blood vessels. This is highly
surprising, and exciting. It provides us with new
information about how various cells can communicate and
support each other in forming various organs in the body,"
says Lars Jakobsson.
The new stem cell model makes
it possible to create cultures in which heparan sulfate is
produced solely by support cells and not by endothelial
cells. It has previously been known that heparan sulfate
binds various growth factors, including VEGF, and
'introduces' these factors to the receptors on the surface
of the cell. The Uppsala researchers are now demonstrating
that VEGF that is introduced by heparan sulfate to support
cells (as opposed to the heparan sulfate found on
endothelial cells) provides a much stronger and
longer-lasting effect on the activation of endothelial
cells. The conclusion is that both the amount and the
position of the heparan sulfate play a decisive role in the
formation of new blood vessels.
"We show that heparan sulfate
serves as glue that holds VEGF and its receptors in place on
the surface of the cell so that the signal to generate new
blood vessels lingers much longer. It was not previously
known that heparan sulfate has this function, and the
function may very well apply to other systems of receptors
and communication," Lars Jakobsson believes.
These scientists have thus
identified an entirely new mechanism for how communication
can be regulated between cells. This clears the way for the
creation of new drugs that can regulate the new generation
of blood vessels. Such drugs could improve the treatment of
cancer, rheumatism, and certain eye disease, for instance.