©1996 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
The Carboxyl-terminal Domain(111165) of Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Is Critical for Its Mitogenic Potency (*)

(Received for publication, August 14, 1995; and in revised form, January 15, 1996)

Bruce A. Keyt (§) Lea T. Berleau Hung V. Nguyen Helen Chen Henry Heinsohn (2) Richard Vandlen (1) Napoleone Ferrara

From the  (1)Departments of Cardiovascular Research,Protein Chemistry, and (2)Process Sciences, Genentech, Inc., South San Francisco, California 94080

ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
REFERENCES

ABSTRACT

Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) is a potent and specific mitogen for endothelial cells. VEGF is synthesized and secreted by many differentiated cells in response to a variety of stimuli including hypoxia. VEGF is expressed in a variety of tissues as multiple homodimeric forms (121, 165, 189, and 206 amino acids/monomer) resulting from alternative RNA splicing. VEGF is a soluble mitogen that does not bind heparin; the longer forms of VEGF bind heparin with progressively higher affinity. The higher molecular weight forms of VEGF can be cleaved by plasmin to release a diffusible form(s) of VEGF. We characterized the proteolysis of VEGF by plasmin and other proteases. Thrombin, elastase, and collagenase did not cleave VEGF, whereas trypsin generated a series of smaller fragments. The isolated plasmin fragments of VEGF were compared with respect to heparin binding, interaction with soluble VEGF receptors, and ability to promote endothelial cell mitogenesis. Plasmin yields two fragments of VEGF as indicated by reverse phase high performance liquid chromatography and SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis: an amino-terminal homodimeric protein containing receptor binding determinants and a carboxyl-terminal polypeptide which bound heparin. Amino-terminal sequencing of the carboxyl-terminal peptide identified the plasmin cleavage site as Arg-Ala. A heterodimeric form of VEGF, was isolated from partial plasmin digests of VEGF. The carboxyl-terminal polypeptide (111-165) displayed no affinity for soluble kinase domain region (KDR) or Fms-like tyrosine kinase (FLT-1) receptors. The various isoforms of VEGF (165, 165/110, 110, and 121) bound soluble kinase domain region receptor with similar affinity (approximately 30 pM). In contrast, soluble FLT-1 receptor differentiated VEGF isoforms (165, 165/110, 110, and 121) with apparent affinities of 10, 30, 120, and 200 pM, respectively. Endothelial cell mitogenic potencies of VEGF and VEGF were decreased more than 100-fold compared to that of VEGF. The present findings indicate that removal of the carboxyl-terminal domain, whether it is due to alternative splicing of mRNA or to proteolysis, is associated with a significant loss in bioactivity.


INTRODUCTION

Angiogenesis, the growth of new vessels, is required for a wide variety of physiologic and pathologic proliferative processes. Recent evidence implicates vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), (^1)an endothelial-cell specific mitogen and angiogenesis inducer(1, 2) , as a critical regulator of normal and pathologic angiogenesis(3) . VEGF mRNA expression is temporally and spatially related to proliferation of blood vessels in the ovarian corpus luteum or in the developing embryo(4, 5) . Furthermore, recent studies have shown that monoclonal antibodies specific for VEGF are able to suppress the growth of human tumor cell lines in nude mice, suggesting that VEGF is an important mediator of tumor angiogenesis(6) . VEGF mRNA undergoes alternative splicing events that lead to the production of four mature homodimeric proteins, each monomer having 121, 165, 189, or 206 amino acids (VEGF, VEGF, VEGF, and VEGF, respectively)(7, 8, 9) . VEGF does not bind to heparin; in contrast, VEGF and VEGF bind to heparin with increasingly greater affinity. Cells transfected with cDNA encoding VEGF or VEGF secrete bioactive VEGF into the medium. In contrast, when VEGF and VEGF were expressed in mammalian cells, little or no VEGF can be found in the medium(9) . In previous studies, we demonstrated that VEGF or VEGF are secreted but are almost completely bound to heparan sulfate containing proteoglycans in the extracellular matrix(10, 11) . However, a diffusible fragment having qualitatively the same activity as intact VEGF could be released by plasmin. Extracellular matrix derived from cells expressing VEGF or VEGF and, to a lesser extent, VEGF, promotes the growth of vascular endothelial cells, demonstrating that matrix-bound VEGF is bioactive(11) .

In the present study, we studied the interaction with heparin to address the biologic significance of the larger molecular forms of VEGF. We isolated and characterized plasmin-generated fragments of VEGF and compared these fragments to native VEGF or VEGF with respect to various biochemical and biological functions. Our studies demonstrate that loss of the carboxyl-terminal domain, whether due to proteolysis or alternative splicing, correlates with a substantial decrease in endothelial cell mitogenic activity of VEGF.


EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES

Materials

Iodine-125 radionuclide was purchased from DuPont NEN. Chloramine T hydrate (N-chloro-p-toluene sulfonamide) and sodium metabisulfite were purchased from Aldrich. Tris and sodium phosphate salts (monobasic and dibasic) were obtained from Calbiochem and Scientific Products/Mallinckrodt, respectively. Hydrochloric acid, trichloroacetic acid, and Tween 20 (polyethylene-20-sorbitan monolaurate) were from Fisher Scientific. Bovine serum albumin and aprotinin were purchased from Sigma (St. Louis, MO). Gel filtration columns (PD-10), S-Sepharose columns, metal-chelating Sepharose and heparin-Sepharose were from Pharmacia Biotech Inc. Reverse phase and heparin columns were from Vydac (Hesperia, CA) and PerSeptive Biosystems (Cambridge, MA), respectively. Acetonitrile was HPLC-grade from J.T. Baker. The sodium salt of porcine intestinal heparin at 1000 USP units/ml was purchased from Elkins-Sinn, Inc. (Cherry Hill, NJ). Plasmin was from Helena Laboratories (Beaumont, TX). Trypsin, chymotrypsin, Pronase and elastase were from Calbiochem, and collagenase, clostripain, proteinase K, and Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease were from Worthington Biochemical (Freehold, NJ). Bromelain, subtilisin, pepsin, and thermolysin were from Boehringer Mannheim. Thrombin was kindly provided by Dr. Walter Kisiel of the University of New Mexico. Affinity-purified rabbit anti-human IgG, Fc specific antibodies and polystyrene 96-well breakaway microtiter plates were purchased from Cappel Laboratories (West Chester, PA) and Dynatech (Chantilly, VA), respectively. Fetal calf serum was from HyClone (Logan, UT). The construction, expression and purification of FLT-1 and KDR receptor-IgG chimeras was as described by Park et al.(12) .

VEGF Expressed and Purified from Chinese Hamster Ovary Cells

Recombinant human VEGF was purified (1) from media conditioned by transfected Chinese hamster ovary cells (7, 13) , as described previously. Harvested cell culture fluid was collected after 7 days and concentrated 10-fold by ultrafiltration. The concentrate was diafiltered into 20 mM Na phosphate at pH 7. VEGF was purified by cation exchange chromatography on S-Sepharose and eluted with a gradient of NaCl. Further purification was obtained by metal-chelating chromatography, followed by hydrophobic interaction chromatography using gradient elutions in imidazole and ammonium sulfate, respectively. VEGF was formulated by gel filtration on G25 Sephadex in 125 mM NaCl and 10 mM sodium citrate at pH 6. Identity was established by SDS-PAGE, reverse phase HPLC, amino-terminal sequencing and amino acid composition.

VEGF and VEGF Expressed, Refolded, and Purified from Escherichia coli

We have recently developed a procedure for preparing unglycosylated VEGF from bacterial expression. Transformed E. coli cells were lysed by sonication, and the VEGF (or VEGF) protein was recovered in an insoluble pellet after centrifugation. The pellet was washed with 4 M urea in 20 mM Tris buffer at pH 8 with 5 mM EDTA before solubilization by addition of 25 mM dithiothreitol to the wash buffer. The extraction was allowed to continue for 2 h with stirring at 4 °C before centrifugation to remove insoluble bacterial components. The extract was then dialyzed overnight against 0.4 M NaCl, 20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8 at 4 °C during which time the extracted protein was allowed to re-fold. The dialyzed, re-folded VEGF was purified by adsorption to a cation exchange resin (S-Sepharose) and elution with a gradient of 0.4-1.0 M NaCl. Fractions containing dimeric VEGF (or VEGF), as determined by SDS-PAGE, were pooled and the protein further purified by C4 reverse phase chromatography in 0.1% trifluoroacetic acid with elution by an acetonitrile gradient. VEGF and VEGF eluted in approximately 30% acetonitrile. Identity was established by SDS-PAGE under both reducing and non-reducing conditions, by peptide sequencing, amino acid analysis, and mass spectrometry. Refolding of E. coli-derived VEGF was evaluated by comparison with CHO-derived VEGF using monoclonal antibody-based enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, heparin affinity, and receptor binding as described under ``Results.''

Enzyme Digests of VEGF

Initial screening of plasmin, thrombin, elastase, collagenase, trypsin, chymotrypsin, pepsin, subtilisin, clostripain, bromelain, Pronase, proteinase K, thermolysin, and S. aureus V8 protease for digestion of VEGF was done at enzyme to substrate ratios of 1:100 (by weight) at 25 °C for 24 h at pH 7. Digests were stopped by freezing the samples prior to analysis by reverse phase HPLC and SDS-PAGE under reducing and non-reducing conditions.

Preparation of VEGF, VEGF, and the Carboxyl-terminal polypeptide (111-165) from Plasmin Digestion of VEGF

Plasmin was added to purified VEGF (1:200 ratio by weight) and incubated at 25 °C, pH 7.4, for 4 h for the isolation of VEGF or 24 h for the isolation of VEGF and carboxyl-terminal polypeptide (111-165). A schematic diagram depicting the plasmin cleavage of VEGF is shown in Fig. 1. The plasmin digests were stopped at the appropriate time by the addition of aprotinin at a 10-fold molar excess with respect to plasmin. Partially digested VEGF (4 h digest) were separated on a POROS heparin HE2 column as described below. The limit digest of VEGF (24 h) was applied to a heparin-Sepharose column (1.5 times 10 cm) pre-equilibrated in 0.15 M NaCl, 50 mM phosphate buffer at pH 7 (PBS). VEGF eluted from the heparin column in the void volume. After the column was washed (with 10 column volumes of PBS), the carboxyl-terminal polypeptide (111-165) was eluted with 1 M NaCl, 50 mM phosphate at pH 7. The protein containing fractions were dialyzed against PBS. Purity and identity was assessed by SDS-PAGE, amino acid sequence and composition, reverse phase HPLC, and mass spectrometry.


Figure 1: Plasmin cleavage of human VEGF. This schematic diagram depicts the sequential cleavage of the Arg-Ala bond in each of the VEGF monomers. The monomers of VEGF are shown in anti-parallel orientation, with the carboxyl termini in distant positions, according to homology with the platelet-derived growth factor beta dimer crystal structure(35) . The monomers of a VEGF dimer are covalently linked via two interchain disulfide bonds shown as black bars. Within the 1-110 and 111-165 domains of each monomer, there are three and four intrachain disulfide bonds, respectively (not shown). There are no interdomain disulfides linking the receptor binding domain (1-110) to the carboxyl-terminal domain (111-165); such that following plasmin cleavage, the 55-amino acid carboxy polypeptides are released from the VEGF dimer. VEGF, VEGF, and VEGF dimers are shown in the top, middle, and bottom, respectively.



Radiolabeling of VEGF

VEGF was radiolabeled using a modification of the chloramine T-catalyzed iodination method described by Hunter and Greenwood(14) . In a typical reaction, 50 µl of 1 M Tris-HCl, 0.01% Tween 20 at pH 7.5 was added to 5 µl of sodium iodide-125 (0.5 mCi) in a capped reaction vessel. An aliquot of VEGF (10 µg/10 µl) in 125 mM NaCl, 10 mM sodium citrate at pH 6 was added to the reaction vessel. Iodination was initiated by addition of 12.5 µl of 1 mg/ml chloramine T in 0.1 M sodium phosphate, pH 7.5. After 60 s, iodination was terminated by addition of sodium metabisulfite (25 µl, 1 mg/ml) in 0.1 M sodium phosphate, pH 7.5. The reaction vessel was vortexed after each addition. The reaction mixture was immediately applied to a PD-10 column (G25 Sephadex) that was pre-equilibrated with 0.5% bovine serum albumin, 0.01% Tween 20 in phosphate-buffered saline. Fractions were collected and counted for iodine-125 radioactivity with a scintillation counter (LKB model 1277). Typically, the specific radioactivity of the iodinated VEGF was 26 ± 2.5 µCi/µg, which corresponded to approximately 1 I/2 molecules of VEGF dimer. There are four tyrosines in VEGF at positions 21, 25, 39, and 45. Tryptic mapping of RCM VEGF indicated approximately 30% and 70% of the radioactivity co-eluted with tryptic peptides T2 (amino acids 17-23) and T3 (amino acids 24-56), respectively.

Dodecyl Sulfate Gel Electrophoresis

Radiolabeled samples were either reduced, or reduced and carboxymethylated (RCM) prior to gel electrophoresis. The reduced samples were denatured in 1% SDS with 10 mM dithiothreitol (DTT) and heated at 37 °C for 30 min. Samples for reduction and carboxymethylation were treated by a modified procedure of Crestfield et al.(15) . Those samples were dialyzed overnight in 8 M urea, 0.5 M Tris-HCl at pH 8.3 with 5 mM EDTA, then reduced with 10 mM DTT at 37 °C for 30 min. Iodoacetic acid (1 M IAA in 1 M NaOH) was added to a final concentration of 25 mM and incubated at 25 °C for 15 min. The alkylation reaction was quenched by addition of 25 mM DTT, followed by overnight dialysis at 4 °C with 50 mM NH(4)CO(3). Electrophoretic analysis was by the method of Laemmli (16) on a SDS gradient acrylamide gel (10-20%), followed by either Coomassie Blue or ammoniacal silver staining(17) . After the stained gels were dried, the radiolabeled proteins were visualized by autoradiography.

Amino Acid Analysis and Ultraviolet Spectroscopy

A Beckman 6300 amino acid analyzer was used with a sodium citrate program and ninhydrin detection. Aliquots (10 µl each) of VEGF samples were hydrolyzed in constant boiling HCl for 24 h at 110 °C. Quantitation was based on the yields of alanine and leucine. VEGF samples were diluted in 125 mM NaCl, 10 mM sodium citrate at pH 6 and scanned for UV absorption from 190 to 800 nm on a Hewlett Packard 8452A diode array spectrophotometer. The molar extinction coefficient for VEGF was determined as 0.37 absorbance units for a 1 mg/ml solution at 276 nm.

Mass Spectrometry

The molecular weights of VEGF variants were analyzed using a Sciex API III triple quadrupole mass spectrometer. The data was obtained by scanning from 300 to 2000 Da with a 0.8-ms dwell time per mass step. A Harvard infusion pump was used to introduce the samples into the mass spectrometer at a flow rate of 3-5 µl/min. The data was collected in the data summing mode and analyzed using MacBioSpec software.

Reverse Phase HPLC

Analytical separations of VEGF fragments were done using a Vydac C(4), 5-µm bead, 300-Å pore size column (4.6 times 250 mm) pre-equilibrated in 0.1% trifluoroacetic acid, 5% acetonitrile at 40 °C on a Hewlett Packard 1090 liquid chromatograph with diode array detection. Typically, an aliquot of VEGF (10 µl) containing 30 µg was injected onto the HPLC column with a flow rate of 1 ml/min. Reverse phase separation of VEGF and VEGF fragments was done with a two-step gradient from 5% to 25% acetonitrile with 0.1% trifluoroacetic acid for 20 min, followed by a shallow gradient from 25% to 33% in 32 min. The effluent was monitored for absorbance (at 210 and 280 nm).

Heparin Affinity Chromatography

Analytical and preparative affinity chomatography was performed on a HP1090 liquid chromatograph using a POROS HE2 heparin column (4.6 times 100 mm). The column was pre-equilibrated with 50 mM Na(2)PO(4) buffer at pH 7.4 using a 0.5 ml/min flow rate at 40 °C. Samples of VEGF were injected and eluted with a salt gradient from 0 to 1 M NaCl in 40 min (25 mM/min). The effluent was monitored for absorbance at 210 and 280 nm. Fractions (0.5 ml each) were collected and further analyzed as described under ``Results.''

Binding Assays with Soluble Receptors

Polystyrene 96-well breakaway microtiter plates were coated overnight at 4 °C with 100 µl of affinity-purified rabbit anti-human IgG, Fc-specific antibodies at 10 µg/ml in 50 mM Na(2)CO(3) at pH 9.6. The microtiter plates were blocked with 200 µl of 10% fetal calf serum in phosphate-buffered saline (FBS/PBS) for 1 h at 25 °C. Blocking buffer was removed, and 100 µl of a solution containing receptor-IgG chimeric protein (FLT1-IgG or KDR-IgG) at 15 ng/ml (70 pM final concentration), I labeled VEGF from CHO cells (5000 cpm per well, 20 pM final), and cold competitor at varying concentrations in PBS with 10% FBS was added to the microtiter wells. Binding was carried out at ambient temperature for 4 h with gentle agitation, after which the wells were washed four times with 10% FBS in PBS. The bound radioactivity was quantitated with a scintillation counter (LKB model 1277). Binding data was analyzed using a four-parameter fitting program (Kaleidagraph, Adelbeck Software). The receptor binding studies were repeated in the presence of heparin (10 µg/ml) to observe the maximal effect of heparin on the receptor-VEGF interaction. In these studies, we have used heparin as a commercial reagent to help address the biologic significance of the various forms of VEGF. Similar to the results observed by Tessler et al.(18) and Gitay-Goren et al.(26) , dose-response studies with increasing heparin indicated the optimal concentration to achieve maximal KDR receptor binding.

Endothelial Cell Proliferation Assay for VEGF

Bovine adrenal cortical capillary endothelial cells were maintained in low glucose Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium supplemented with 10% calf serum, 2 mM glutamine, and antibiotics (growth medium) as described previously(1) . For bioassay, cells were sparsely seeded in 12-well plates with 7 times 10^3 cells/well in 1 ml of growth medium. Samples of VEGF or VEGF variants (1 ml) were diluted in the culture media at concentrations from 1 µg/ml to 10 pg/ml (final) and layered onto the seeded cells. After 5 days, the cells were dissociated with trypsin and quantified using a Coulter Counter (Miami, FL).


RESULTS

Limited Proteolysis of VEGF

The susceptibility of VEGF to proteolytic digestion was explored using the glycosylated form of VEGF as expressed and purified from CHO cell conditioned media. As observed in Fig. 2A (lane 2), VEGF appeared on SDS-PAGE as a doublet of proteins at 43 and 45 kDa. Tryptic mapping of reduced and carboxymethylated VEGF indicated approximately 75% of the protein contained N-linked glycosylation at Asn; the remaining 25% of VEGF was unglycosylated (data not shown). The doublet of protein observed on SDS-PAGE was due to partial glycosylation. As seen in other studies, VEGF from E. coli appeared as a single protein band of 38 kDa. A variety of enzyme digests of VEGF were prepared under similar conditions (1:100, enzyme:VEGF at 25 °C and for 20 h). Relatively complete digestion was observed on reverse phase HPLC with broad-specificity enzymes, such as subtilisin, Pronase, proteinase K, and thermolysin. Enzymes such as plasmin, trypsin, chymotrypsin, clostripain, and bromelain yielded varying extents of partial digestion resulting in a ``core protein,'' which was resistant to further proteolysis. No proteolysis was observed with thrombin, collagenase, elastase, S. aureus V8 protease, or pepsin as indicated by HPLC. The digestion profiles were similar for CHO- and E. coli-derived VEGF. A series of enzyme digests were analyzed by non-reducing SDS-PAGE, which indicated that trypsin and plasmin cleaved VEGF, but thrombin, elastase, chymotrypsin, or pepsin did not (Fig. 2A). These enzyme digests were reduced, carboxymethylated, and evaluated by SDS-PAGE (Fig. 2B) to observe additional proteolysis that was not apparent under non-reducing conditons. Some proteolysis of VEGF by chymotrypsin was observed (lane 7), in addition to the cleavage of VEGF by plasmin and trypsin (lanes 4 and 6). VEGF is relatively resistant to proteolysis by enzymes such as collagenase, thrombin, and elastase. However, plasmin rapidly cleaves VEGF into discrete, non-disulfide-linked fragments.


Figure 2: Enzymatic digestion of CHO-derived VEGF. Digests with thrombin, plasmin, elastase, trypsin, chymotrypsin, and pepsin are evaluated in panel A, by non-reducing SDS-PAGE. In panel A, lanes 1, blank; lane 2, non-reduced CHO-derived VEGF; lane 3, thrombin; lane 4, plasmin; lane 5, elastase; lane 6, trypsin; lane 7, chymotrypsin; lane 8, pepsin. In panel B, the samples were RCM after the enzyme digestion. Lane 1, non-reduced CHO-derived VEGF; lane 2, RCM CHO-derived VEGF; lane 3, thrombin; lane 4, plasmin; lane 5, elastase; lane 6, trypsin; lane 7, chymotrypsin; lane 8, pepsin digests of RCM CHO-derived VEGF.



Isolation and Identification of Plasmin-cleaved VEGF Fragments

To eliminate the apparent heterogeneity due to glycosylation of CHO cell expressed VEGF, we studied the activity of plasmin on E. coli-derived VEGF. The absence of carbohydrate on this form of VEGF was confirmed by tryptic mapping. A plasmin digest of VEGF from E. coli (1:200 enzyme:substrate) was initiated and samples removed at various times for analysis by reverse phase HPLC. After 2 h of plasmin treatment, four protein peaks with absorption at 210 nm were resolved by HPLC (Fig. 3). The first peak, eluting at 12 min, exhibited minimal absorption at 280 nm, consistent with the carboxyl-terminal region of VEGF, which has only one aromatic amino acid, phenylalanine 128. Protein containing HPLC fractions were collected, pooled and identified by amino acid sequence, composition, and mass spectrometry. The early eluting peak of plasmin-cleaved VEGF was identified as the polypeptide (111-165) by the amino-terminal sequence: Ala-Arg-Gln-Glu-Asn-Pro. The amino acid composition and minimal retention on reverse phase HPLC was consistent with the highly charged, hydrophilic 55-amino acid, carboxyl-terminal polypeptide. Mass spectral analysis indicated a molecular weight of 6473 atomic mass units for the (111-165) polypeptide, which compared well with the expected value of 6474 atomic mass units based on the amino acid sequence. The later eluting HPLC peaks, with retention times of 32, 35, and 38 min were identified as homodimer of (1-165), heterodimer of (1-165, 1-110) and homodimer of (1-110), respectively. All of the later eluting peaks shared the amino-terminal sequence: Ala^1-Pro-Met-Ala-Glu^5. The homodimer of (1-165) and the homodimer of (1-110) exhibited molecular weights of 38,306 and 25,385 atomic mass units, which compared well with the theoretical values of 38,300 and 25,389 atomic mass units, respectively. Retention times of these plasmin cleavage products are consistent with the loss of the hydrophilic carboxyl-terminal polypeptide (111-165), such that the heterodimer (1-165, 1-110) and homodimer (1-110) are progressively more hydrophobic and later eluting on reverse phase HPLC.


Figure 3: Reverse phase HPLC separation of plasmin digest products of E. coli-derived VEGF. After 4 h of proteolysis at 25 °C with plasmin (1:200, enzyme:substrate), the partial digest products were resolved by HPLC. The plasmin digest products include: the 55-amino acid carboxyl-terminal polypeptide (55), VEGF homodimer (165/165), VEGF heterodimer (165/110), VEGF homodimer (110/110), which eluted at 12, 32, 35, and 38 min, respectively.



Kinetic Analysis of Plasmin Cleavage

Fig. 4shows the kinetics for plasmin cleavage of E. coli-derived VEGF (enzyme:substrate 1:100) at pH 7. The digest was analyzed at various times by reverse phase HPLC to quantify the amount of each form of VEGF. Cleavage of intact homodimer (1-165) occurred with a concomitant increase in the heterodimer (1-165, 1-110) followed by the appearance of the homodimer (1-110). The amount of (111-165) polypeptide increased over time and achieved a maximal level, which was approximately 40% of that observed for the (1-110) homodimer. Additional proteolysis of the cleaved polypeptide (111-165) by plasmin leads to lower molecular weight species, which eluted at 11 min on HPLC (Fig. 3). The plasmin catalyzed cleavage of VEGF homodimer was approximately 3-fold faster than that observed for VEGF cleavage, as indicated by the rate of disappearance for each protein observed on HPLC. The observation that VEGF homodimer was cleaved faster than the VEGF heterodimer was unexpected, since the two plasmin cleavage sites (Arg-Ala in each monomer) are identical in the dimer. We considered that the lysine-rich polypeptide (111-165) of VEGF may act as an additional recognition site for plasmin on VEGF and that the kringles of plasmin (kringles 1, 4, and 5) may function as lysine-binding modules for binding VEGF. Fig. 1shows schematically the sequential cleavage of VEGF by plasmin. In the first cleavage, the intact carboxyl-terminal region of VEGF presented by the opposing VEGF monomer may increase binding and cleavage of the full-length monomer, but does not participate in the binding of the heterodimer resulting in reduced rate for the second cleavage of VEGF.


Figure 4: Kinetics of plasmin cleavage of VEGF. The progress of plasmin digestion was followed by repetitive reverse phase HPLC analysis at hourly intervals. The HPLC eluate was monitored for absorbance at 210 nm, and the amount of VEGF homodimer, VEGF heterodimer, VEGF homodimer, and the 55-amino acid carboxyl-terminal polypeptide at the indicated times were determined by peak area integration.



Heparin Binding of Homo- and Heterodimeric VEGF

The heparin binding function of VEGF was studied by analytical affinity chromatography. Samples of E. coli-derived VEGF, before and after treatment with plasmin, were applied to a POROS heparin column and eluted with an increasing gradient of NaCl. The eluate was monitored for optical density at 210 nm, and appropriate pooled fractions were analyzed by reverse phase HPLC. The results, shown in Table 1, indicate that the heparin binding function of VEGF is completely mediated by the carboxyl-terminal domain (111-165). The heparin affinity of VEGF and the polypeptide (111-165) are nearly equivalent as determined by the concentration of NaCl required for elution (680 and 690 mM, respectively). Heterodimeric VEGF eluted at 420 mM NaCl, indicating a significant decrease in heparin affinity associated with the loss of one carboxyl-terminal domain. No heparin binding was observed for homodimeric VEGF and VEGF. Various conditions for plasmin digestion were used to prepare hetero- and homodimeric VEGF, followed by preparative heparin chromatography. Fig. 5shows E. coli VEGF, lacking carbohydrate modification, which yields a single band on SDS-PAGE with an apparent molecular mass of 38 kDa (lane 1). The SDS-PAGE analysis of a plasmin digest of E. coli VEGF appears in lane 2. VEGF homodimer was not retained on heparin-agarose (lane 3), while the (111-165) polypeptide with trace amounts of homo- and heterodimeric VEGF were eluted with 1 M NaCl (lane 4). Gradient elution of partial plasmin digests on a POROS-heparin column yielded highly purified preparations of VEGF and VEGF as indicated by reverse phase HPLC (data not shown).




Figure 5: SDS-PAGE of plasmin digested E. coli-derived VEGF. Lane 1, native E. coli-derived VEGF; lane 2, plasmin digest at 20 h; lane 3, heparin-Sepharose column flow-though containing VEGF homodimer; lane 4, 1 M NaCl eluate containing predominantly (111-165) polypeptide, and trace amounts of VEGF homodimer, VEGF heterodimer, and VEGF homodimer.



Binding of VEGF Isoforms to Soluble Receptors in the Presence and Absence of Heparin

Binding of radioiodinated CHO-derived VEGF to KDR-IgG and FLT1-IgG was analyzed using a competitive displacement radioreceptor assay ( Fig. 6and Fig. 7). Various concentrations of unglycosylated (expressed in E. coli) VEGF, VEGF, VEGF, and VEGF were tested for displacement of labeled glycosylated (expressed in CHO cells) VEGF. The 55-amino acid, carboxyl-terminal domain of VEGF (111-165) was tested at 1000-fold molar excess and did not inhibit VEGF binding to the soluble receptors. At concentrations greater than 1000-fold molar excess, the isolated carboxyl-terminal domain appeared to partially displace VEGF from receptor. Radiolabeled VEGF binding to the soluble form of KDR was half-maximally displaced at 38 pM VEGF in the absence of heparin (Fig. 6A). Glycosylation of VEGF did not affect KDR binding, as indicated by the similar affinity exhibited by CHO- and E. coli-derived VEGF (Table 2). Loss of one or both carboxyl-terminal domain(s) had no effect on the affinity of VEGF for KDR as indicated by the IC values for VEGF heterodimer and VEGF and VEGF homodimers (38, 29, and 30 pM, respectively). In the presence of heparin, the amount of VEGF bound to KDR was increased more than 3-fold; however, the apparent affinity of VEGF for KDR was unchanged (Fig. 6B). Glycosylated and unglycosylated VEGF bound KDR with equivalent IC values (31 and 28 pM, respectively). Loss of carboxyl-terminal domains resulted in 2-fold decreased KDR affinity (in the presence of heparin), as observed in competition studies with VEGF heterodimer and VEGF and VEGF homodimers (IC values of 45, 60, and 63 pM, respectively).


Figure 6: Binding of VEGF isoforms to soluble KDR-IgG receptor. The competitive displacement of I-labeled CHO-derived VEGF binding to KDR receptor (15 ng/ml) with various concentrations of CHO-derived VEGF (bullet), E. coli-derived VEGF (circle), E. coli-derived VEGF heterodimer (box), VEGF homodimer (up triangle), VEGF homodimer (), and 55-amino acid carboxyl-terminal polypeptide (). Panels A and B show the results of the binding studies in the absence and presence of heparin, respectively. These binding curves are the result of triplicate assays.




Figure 7: Binding of VEGF isoforms to soluble FLT-1 IgG receptor. The competitive displacement of I-labeled CHO-derived VEGF binding to FLT-1 receptor (5 ng/ml) with various concentrations of CHO-derived VEGF (bullet), E. coli-derived VEGF (circle), E. coli-derived VEGF heterodimer (box), VEGF homodimer (up triangle), VEGF homodimer (), and 55-amino acid carboxyl-terminal polypeptide (). Panels A and B show the results of the binding studies in the absence and presence of heparin, respectively. These binding curves are the result of duplicate assays.





Glycosylated and unglycosylated VEGF exhibited similar affinity for soluble FLT-1 receptor, approximately 10 pM in the absence of heparin (Fig. 7A). Loss of one carboxyl-terminal domain was associated with 3-fold decreased FLT-1 affinity as indicated by the binding of VEGF heterodimer. The loss of both carboxyl-terminal domains resulted in approximately 10-fold reduced FLT-1 affinity as exhibited by the VEGF homodimer. Similarly, the values obtained for the natural splice variant VEGF indicated greater than 20-fold decreased binding to FLT-1 compared with that observed for VEGF (Table 2). The carboxyl-terminal domain itself (polypeptide 111-165) exhibited no binding to FLT-1 (as was observed with KDR). In the presence of heparin, the differences in FLT-1 binding observed for the VEGF variants were diminished (Fig. 7B). Glycosylated and unglycosylated VEGF 165 bound soluble FLT-1 with values for IC of 15 and 19 pM, respectively. VEGF also exhibited similar binding affinity. The binding values for VEGF and VEGF were reduced approximately 2-3-fold, respectively, compared to those observed for VEGF.

Differential Stimulation of Endothelial Cell Growth Induced by VEGF Isoforms

Stimulation of endothelial cell proliferation by VEGF variants was evaluated with bovine adrenal cortical capillary endothelial cells (Fig. 8). The effective concentration to induce 50% of maximal stimulation (EC) was determined in vitro by incubation of endothelial cells with VEGF or VEGF variants at concentrations that varied from 0.3 pM to 40 µM. Glycosylated and unglycosylated VEGF exhibited similar EC values of 5.8 and 5.2 pM, respectively. The loss of one carboxyl-terminal domain resulted in approximately 7-fold decrease in potency for VEGF as indicated by the higher EC value of 40 pM. Lower molecular weight variants, VEGF and VEGF, displayed greater than 100-fold reduced potency with values of 2.58 and 2.56 nM for EC, respectively. The isolated carboxyl-terminal domain (111-165) had no stimulatory effect on endothelial cell proliferation even with 4 orders of magnitude molar excess of polypeptide compared to the half-maximally effective concentration for VEGF. Similar results were observed with fetal bovine aortic endothelial cells with respect to a 10-fold and 100-fold loss in mitogenic potency with VEGF and VEGF (or VEGF), respectively (data not shown). These results demonstrate the critical role of the 111-165 region of VEGF in the stimulation of both large and small vessel endothelial cell proliferation.


Figure 8: Endothelial cell proliferation in response to VEGF isoforms. Bovine adrenal cortical endothelial cells were cultured for 5 days in the presence of varying concentrations of CHO-derived VEGF (bullet), E. coli-derived VEGF (circle), E. coli-derived VEGF heterodimer (box), VEGF homodimer (up triangle), VEGF homodimer (), and 55-amino acid carboxyl-terminal polypeptide (). The cells were trypsinized and counted as described under ``Experimental Procedures.'' These results represent the average of duplicate assays.




DISCUSSION

Extracellular proteolysis and remodeling of the extracellular matrix play key roles in a variety of developmental processes(19) . In addition, plasminogen activation and generation of plasmin have been shown to be important for the angiogenesis cascade(20) . Such processes also play a major role in the local invasiveness and metastasis of tumor cells. Strong experimental evidence supports the concept that growth factors stored in the extracellular matrix and released in the course of its degradation are major mediators of such inductive processes. Numerous growth factors including fibroblast growth factor, platelet-derived growth factor, granulocyte/macrophage colony-stimulating factor, transforming growth factor-beta, and leukemia inhibitory factor have been shown to be associated with the extracellular matrix(21, 22, 23, 24, 25) .

Alternatively spliced molecular species of VEGF are differentially localized to heparan sulfate containing proteoglycans of the extracellular matrix or released as diffusible proteins(10, 11) . In addition to this transcriptionally regulated heterogeneity, there appears the potential for proteolytic processing which may further regulate the bioavailability of VEGF. In the present study, we have demonstrated that plasmin readily cleaves VEGF to yield a non-heparin binding isoform, VEGF, and a heparin-binding fragment composed of the carboxyl-terminal domain (111-165). In contrast to plasmin, neither thrombin, elastase, nor collagenase efficiently cleaves VEGF. Like VEGF, VEGF has no affinity for heparin and is a diffusible molecule(11) . Therefore, the carboxyl-terminal domain (amino acids 111-165) is completely responsible for the observed heparin binding of VEGF in vitro. Interestingly, a partially cleaved form, VEGF was isolated that exhibited intermediate heparin affinity.

We have used the multiple forms of VEGF obtained by plasmin cleavage or alternative splicing to evaluate the role of the carboxyl-terminal domain on VEGF receptor affinity and endothelial cell growth. The 55-amino acid peptide (111-165) of VEGF did not bind the soluble KDR receptor, as indicated by the complete lack of inhibition observed with I-labeled VEGF binding. Binding to the KDR receptor is mediated by determinants in the 1-110 region of VEGF. The lower molecular weight diffusible forms, VEGF and VEGF, bind KDR with similar affinity as VEGF in the absence of heparin. A modest effect of heparin is the 3-4-fold increased capacity of KDR for binding VEGF. The heparin-induced potentiation of VEGF binding to KDR has also been observed by other investigators. Gitay-Goren et al.(26) observed an increased number of high affinity VEGF binding sites on endothelial cells in the presence versus the absence of heparin, but heparin did not significantly alter the dissocation constant. Tessler et al.(18) also reported increased binding of VEGF to Flk-1/KDR type receptors transfected into NIH3T3 cells as a function of heparin.

FLT-1 binding is significantly different for the long and short forms of VEGF. In contrast to the results observed with KDR, the shorter forms of VEGF (110 and 121 forms) bound FLT-1 receptor with 10-20-fold decreased affinity compared to VEGF. VEGF displayed FLT-1 binding intermediate to the 165 and 110 forms of VEGF. Taken together, these results demonstrate that the 55-amino acid domain of VEGF mediates, in part, the binding to FLT-1. This domain appears to enhance FLT-1 binding in addition to the receptor binding determinants contained in VEGF, but by itself the 55-amino acid domain cannot compete with VEGF binding to FLT-1, as indicated by the lack of competition with greater than 1000-fold molar excess of (111-165) polypeptide (see Fig. 7). As such, the 55-amino acid, carboxyl-terminal domain of VEGF plays a different role with KDR as compared to FLT-1 in mediating receptor binding. For example, there is no heparin-induced potentiation of FLT-1 binding of VEGF as is observed with KDR. Cohen et al.(27) have observed the inhibition of heparin on VEGF binding to FLT-1 receptors on human melanoma cells. These investigators observed significantly decreased melanoma cell binding of I-labeled VEGF and VEGF in the presence of exogenous heparin (1 µg/ml) compared to that observed in the absence of heparin.

VEGF interaction with cell surface heparan-sulfate containing proteoglycans on endothelial cell growth has been examined by numerous investigators(18, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30) . Sasisekharan et al.(30) have indicated a role for heparin-like molecules by inhibiting endothelial cell proliferation and in vivo neovascularization with heparinase. The binding of I-labeled VEGF to endothelial cells was completely inhibited by pretreatment with heparinase and could be restored by the addition of exogenous heparin (25) . To evaluate the significance of the relative heparin affinity of VEGF isoforms, we tested the mitogenic activity of the 165, 165/110, 110, and 121 forms of VEGF on primary cultured bovine adrenal cortical capillary cells and fetal bovine aortic endothelial cells. Loss of one or both carboxyl-terminal domains of VEGF significantly reduced the proliferation of endothelial cells. The mitogenic potency of VEGF and VEGF was substantially decreased (>100-fold) compared to VEGF. VEGF exhibited 7-10-fold reduced activity on endothelial cell growth. These results are most interesting in light of the similarities and differences observed with various VEGF isoforms binding soluble KDR or FLT-1 receptors. The modestly decreased affinity observed with soluble KDR and FLT-1 receptors and the 110 or 121 isoforms of VEGF does not account for the drastically decreased endothelial cell mitogenic potency. This discrepancy suggests that the stability of VEGF-heparan sulfate-receptor complexes probably contributes to effective signal transduction and stimulation of endothelial cell proliferation. Further studies are clearly warranted to explore the regulatory function of heparin-like molecules in VEGF receptor interaction, signal transduction, and mitogenesis of endothelial cells.

Our findings indicate that VEGF, by alternative splicing and/or limited proteolysis, has the potential to express structural and functional heterogeneity that yields a graded biological response. Our current understanding of VEGF biology suggests the following sequence of events may occur during angiogenesis. Initially, cells respond to hypoxia or other stimuli by inducing VEGF transcription(31) , resulting in increased expression of long and short forms of VEGF, although VEGF is probably the most abundant isoform. Compared to the longer forms of VEGF, the diffusible forms would migrate a greater distance, bind VEGF receptors, and trigger endothelial cell proliferation and migration. The intensity of the angiogenic signal would be weakest at the most distant sites, given the lesser mitogenic potency of VEGF and VEGF. Closer to the site of VEGF synthesis (i.e. ischemic tissues), the concentration of the 165 isoform is expected to be increased due to extracellular matrix binding and the effect of the biochemical gradient would be enhanced with the associated greater mitogenic potency of VEGF. In the most ischemic areas, matrix-associated VEGF is localized to the cells of origin with the highest concentration and potency. The heterogeneity of VEGF structure and function allows the formation of a biochemical gradient for the migration and chemotaxis of proliferating endothelial cells. In circumstances where plasminogen activation occurs (e.g. tumors and wounds), the presence of plasmin may serve to release stored forms of matrix-bound VEGF to amplify the angiogenic signal.

Placental growth factor (PlGF) is a protein with 53% homology to VEGF (32, 33) . PlGF binds FLT-1 with similar affinity as VEGF, but does not bind to the KDR receptor(12) . Interestingly, recent studies describing the existence of VEGFbulletPlGF heterodimers further extend the concept that structural heterogeneity may be responsible for a graded biological response. While the PlGF homodimer had minimal endothelial cell mitogenic activity compared to that of the VEGF homodimer, the heterodimer displayed intermediate activity(34) . With respect to proteolytic digestion resulting in the generation of VEGF from VEGF or VEGF, little is known at this time about the prevalence of this process in vivo. Nevertheless, the potential exists for VEGF to set up a biochemical gradient that radiates from an ischemic zone and may provide a directional signal for in vivo angiogenesis.


FOOTNOTES

*
The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore by hereby marked ``advertisement'' in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.

§
To whom correspondence should be addressed: Dept. of Cardiovascular Research, Genentech, Inc., 460 Point San Bruno Blvd., South San Francisco, CA 94080.

(^1)
The abbreviations used are: VEGF, vascular endothelial growth factor; PAGE, polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis; HPLC, high performance liquid chromatography; CHO, Chinese hamster ovary; RCM, reduced and carboxymethylated; DTT, dithiothreitol; FBS, fetal bovine serum; PBS, phosphate-buffered saline; PlGF, placental growth factor; KDR, kinase domain region; FLT-1, Fms-like tyrosine kinase.


ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

We thank William Henzel and Reed Harris for protein microsequencing, Allan Padua and Rodney Keck for amino acid analysis, Rex Hayes for purification of CHO- and E. coli-derived forms of VEGF, and Lavon Riddle for purification of KDR and FLT-1 receptor-IgG chimeric protein.


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