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Heparanase inhibition as a systemic approach to protect the endothelial glycocalyx and prevent microvascular complications in diabetes

Gamez, Monica; Elhegni, Hesham E.; Fawaz, Sarah; Ho, Kwan Ho; Campbell, Neill W.; Copland, David A.; Onions, Karen L.; Butler, Matthew J.; Wasson, Elizabeth J.; Crompton, Michael; Ramnath, Raina D.; Qiu, Yan; Yamaguchi, Yu; Arkill, Kenton P.; Bates, David O.; Turnbull, Jeremy E.; Zubkova, Olga V.; Welsh, Gavin I.; Atan, Denize; Satchell, Simon C.; Foster, Rebecca R.

Authors

Monica Gamez

Hesham E. Elhegni

Sarah Fawaz

Kwan Ho Ho

Neill W. Campbell

David A. Copland

Karen L. Onions

Matthew J. Butler

Elizabeth J. Wasson

Michael Crompton

Raina D. Ramnath

Yan Qiu

Yu Yamaguchi

Kenton P. Arkill

David O. Bates

Olga V. Zubkova

Gavin I. Welsh

Denize Atan

Simon C. Satchell

Rebecca R. Foster



Abstract

Background
Diabetes mellitus is a chronic disease which is detrimental to cardiovascular health, often leading to secondary microvascular complications, with huge global health implications. Therapeutic interventions that can be applied to multiple vascular beds are urgently needed. Diabetic retinopathy (DR) and diabetic kidney disease (DKD) are characterised by early microvascular permeability changes which, if left untreated, lead to visual impairment and renal failure, respectively. The heparan sulphate cleaving enzyme, heparanase, has previously been shown to contribute to diabetic microvascular complications, but the common underlying mechanism which results in microvascular dysfunction in conditions such as DR and DKD has not been determined.

Methods
In this study, two mouse models of heparan sulphate depletion (enzymatic removal and genetic ablation by endothelial specific Exotosin-1 knock down) were utilized to investigate the impact of endothelial cell surface (i.e., endothelial glycocalyx) heparan sulphate loss on microvascular barrier function. Endothelial glycocalyx changes were measured using fluorescence microscopy or transmission electron microscopy. To measure the impact on barrier function, we used sodium fluorescein angiography in the eye and a glomerular albumin permeability assay in the kidney. A type 2 diabetic (T2D, db/db) mouse model was used to determine the therapeutic potential of preventing heparan sulphate damage using treatment with a novel heparanase inhibitor, OVZ/HS-1638. Endothelial glycocalyx changes were measured as above, and microvascular barrier function assessed by albumin extravasation in the eye and a glomerular permeability assay in the kidney.

Results
In both models of heparan sulphate depletion, endothelial glycocalyx depth was reduced and retinal solute flux and glomerular albumin permeability was increased. T2D mice treated with OVZ/HS-1638 had improved endothelial glycocalyx measurements compared to vehicle treated T2D mice and were simultaneously protected from microvascular permeability changes associated with DR and DKD.

Conclusion
We demonstrate that endothelial glycocalyx heparan sulphate plays a common mechanistic role in microvascular barrier function in the eye and kidney. Protecting the endothelial glycocalyx damage in diabetes, using the novel heparanase inhibitor OVZ/HS-1638, effectively prevents microvascular permeability changes associated with DR and DKD, demonstrating a novel systemic approach to address diabetic microvascular complications.

Citation

Gamez, M., Elhegni, H. E., Fawaz, S., Ho, K. H., Campbell, N. W., Copland, D. A., …Foster, R. R. (in press). Heparanase inhibition as a systemic approach to protect the endothelial glycocalyx and prevent microvascular complications in diabetes. Cardiovascular Diabetology, 23(1), Article 50. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12933-024-02133-1

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jan 11, 2024
Online Publication Date Feb 1, 2024
Deposit Date Feb 5, 2024
Journal Cardiovascular Diabetology
Publisher Springer Verlag
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 23
Issue 1
Article Number 50
DOI https://doi.org/10.1186/s12933-024-02133-1