Oligomerization of acidic fibroblast growth factor is not a prerequisite for its cell proliferation activity

by Arunkumar, A. I.; Kumar, T. K. S.; Kathir, K. M.; Srisailam, S.; Wang, H. M.; Leena, P. S. T.; Chi, Y. H.; Chen, H. C.; Wu, C. H.; Wu, R. T.; Chang, G. G.; Chiu, I. M.; Yu, C.

Oligomerization of fibroblast growth factors (FGFs) induced on binding to heparin or heparan sulfate proteoglycan is considered to be crucial for receptor activation and initiation of biological responses. To gain insight into the mechanism of activation of the receptor by FGFs, in the present study we investigate the effect(s) of interaction of a heparin analog, sucrose octasulfate (SOS), on the structure. stability. and biological activities of a recombinant acidic FGF from Notophthalmus viridescens (nFGF-1). SOS is found to bind to nFGF-1 and significantly increase the thermodynamic stability of the protein. Using a variety of technique, such as size-exclusion chromatography, sedimentation velocity, and multidimensional nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, it is shown that binding of SOS to nFGF-1 retains the protein in its monomeric state. In its monomeric state (complexed to SOS). n-FGF-1 shows significant cell proliferation activity. N-15 and H-1 chemical shift perturbation and the intermolecular nuclear Overhauser effects (NOEs) between SOS and nFGF-1 reveal that the ligand binds to the dense, positively charged cluster located in the groove enclosed by beta-strands 10 and 11. In addition. molecular modeling based on the NOEs observed for the SOS-nFGF-1 complex. indicates that SOS and heparin share a common binding site on the protein. In conclusion. the results of the present study clearly show that heparin-induced oligomerization of nFGF-1 is not mandatory for its cell proliferation activity.

Journal
Protein Science
Volume
11
Issue
5
Year
2002
Start Page
1050-1061
URL
https://dx.doi.org/10.1110/ps.2270102
ISBN/ISSN
1469-896X; 0961-8368
DOI
10.1110/ps.2270102