Decreased interaction of fibronectin, type IV collagen, and heparin due to nonenzymic glycation. Implications for diabetes mellitus

Abstract
The nonenzymatic glycation of basement membrane proteins, such as fibronectin and type IV collagen, occurs in diabetes mellitus. These proteins are nonenzymatically glycated in vivo and can also be nonenzymatically glycated in vitro. After 12 days of incubation at 37 degrees C with 500 mM glucose, purified samples of human plasma fibronectin and native type IV collagen showed a 13.0- and 4.2-fold increase, respectively, in glycated amino acid levels in comparison to control samples incubated in the absence of glucose. Gelatin (denatured calfskin collagen) was glycated 22.3-fold under the same conditions. Scatchard analyses were performed on the binding of radiolabeled fibronectin to gelatin or type IV collagen. It was found that there is a 3-fold reduction in the affinity of fibronectin to type IV collagen due to the nonenzymatic glycation of fibronectin. The dissociation constant (KD) for the binding of control fibronectin to type IV collagen was 9.6 X 10(-7) M while the KD for glycated fibronectin and type IV collagen was 2.9 X 10(-6) M. This was similar to the 2.7-fold reduction in the affinity of fibronectin for gelatin found as a result of the nonenzymatic glycation of fibronectin (KD of 4.5 X 10(-7) M for the interaction of control fibronectin with gelatin vs. KD of 1.2 X 10(-6) M for the interaction of nonenzymatically glycated fibronectin with gelatin). The molecular association of control fibronectin or its glycated counterpart with [3H]heparin was also determined. Scatchard analyses of this interaction showed no difference between control fibronectin and glycated fibronectin in [3H]heparin binding.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)