Warren C. Kett
Curtin University
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Featured researches published by Warren C. Kett.
Analytical Biochemistry | 2002
Ronald Ian William Osmond; Warren C. Kett; Spencer E Skett; Deirdre R. Coombe
Surface plasmon resonance (SPR) biosensors such as the BIAcore 2000 are a useful tool for the analysis of protein-heparin interactions. Generally, biotinylated heparin is captured on a streptavidin-coated surface to create heparinized surfaces for subsequent binding analyses. In this study we investigated three commonly used techniques for the biotinylation of heparin, namely coupling through either carboxylate groups or unsubstituted amines along the heparin chain, or through the reducing terminus of the heparin chain. Biotinylated heparin derivatives were immobilized on streptavidin sensor chips and several heparin-binding proteins were examined. Of the surfaces investigated, heparin attached through the reducing terminus had the highest binding capacity, and in some cases had a higher affinity for the proteins tested. Heparin immobilized via intrachain bare amines had intermediate binding capacity and affinity, and heparin immobilized through the carboxylate groups of uronic acids had the lowest capacity for the proteins tested. These results suggest that immobilizing heparin to a surface via intrachain modifications of the heparin molecule can affect the binding of particular heparin-binding proteins.
Journal of Immunology | 2010
Yoshi Tanino; Deirdre R. Coombe; Sean E. Gill; Warren C. Kett; Osamu Kajikawa; Amanda E. I. Proudfoot; Timothy N. C. Wells; William C. Parks; Thomas N. Wight; Thomas R. Martin; Charles W. Frevert
Chemokine–glycosaminoglycan (GAG) interactions are thought to result in the formation of tissue-bound chemokine gradients. We hypothesized that the binding of chemokines to GAGs would increase neutrophil migration toward CXC chemokines instilled into lungs of mice. To test this hypothesis we compared neutrophil migration toward recombinant human CXCL8 (rhCXCL8) and two mutant forms of CXCL8, which do not bind to heparin immobilized on a sensor chip. Unexpectedly, when instilled into the lungs of mice the CXCL8 mutants recruited more neutrophils than rhCXCL8. The CXCL8 mutants appeared in plasma at significantly higher concentrations and diffused more rapidly across an extracellular matrix in vitro. A comparison of the murine CXC chemokines, KC and MIP-2, revealed that KC was more effective in recruiting neutrophils into the lungs than MIP-2. KC appeared in plasma at significantly higher concentrations and diffused more rapidly across an extracellular matrix in vitro than MIP-2. In kinetic binding studies, KC, MIP-2, and rhCXCL8 bound heparin differently, with KC associating and dissociating more rapidly from immobilized heparin than the other chemokines. These data suggest that the kinetics of chemokine–GAG interactions contributes to chemokine function in tissues. In the lungs, it appears that chemokines, such as CXCL8 or MIP-2, which associate and disassociate slowly from GAGs, form gradients relatively slowly compared with chemokines that either bind GAGs poorly or interact with rapid kinetics. Thus, different types of chemokine gradients may form during an inflammatory response. This suggests a new model, whereby GAGs control the spatiotemporal formation of chemokine gradients and neutrophil migration in tissue.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2003
Warren C. Kett; Ronald Ian William Osmond; Lily Moe; Spencer E Skett; Beverley F. Kinnear; Deirdre R. Coombe
The specificity, affinity and stoichiometry of the interaction between avidin and glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) have been investigated using heparin-coated microtiter-plate assays, a filter binding assay and surface plasmon resonance (SPR) analysis using a BIAcore 2000 biosensor. Avidin binds heparin and heparan sulfate, and chondroitin-4-sulfate, chondroitin-6-sulfate, dermatan sulfate or hyaluronan were unable to compete for binding. Highest-affinity binding was observed with heparin, and weaker binding was seen when using heparan sulfate or low molecular weight heparin preparations. This indicated that only specific polysaccharide structures tightly interact with avidin. Approximately two avidin molecules bind to each heparin molecule with an overall affinity of 160 nM. The interaction is pH dependent, increasing five-fold upon decreasing the pH from 7.5 to 5.5, while binding was negligible at pH 9. We demonstrate the potential of fluorescent avidin derivatives as a tool for the detection of heparin and heparan sulfates on surfaces by application to both heparin immobilized on polystyrene plates and heparan sulfate on cell surfaces.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2015
Arunima Singh; Warren C. Kett; India C. Severin; Isaac Agyekum; Jiana Duan; I. Jonathan Amster; Amanda E. I. Proudfoot; Deirdre R. Coombe; Robert J. Woods
Background: Chemokine-glycosaminoglycan (GAG) binding regulates leukocyte migration. Results: Heparin tetrasaccharides are examined for their ability to inhibit CCL5-CCR1 binding, and key interactions between the heparin fragments and CCL5 are identified. Conclusion: Binding modes and inhibitory capabilities depend on the extent and pattern of sulfation of the heparin fragments. Significance: Inhibition of CCL5-CCR1 binding requires heparin to interact with specific residues on the CCL5 surface. Interactions between chemokines such as CCL5 and glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) are essential for creating haptotactic gradients to guide the migration of leukocytes into inflammatory sites, and the GAGs that interact with CCL5 with the highest affinity are heparan sulfates/heparin. The interaction between CCL5 and its receptor on monocytes, CCR1, is mediated through residues Arg-17 and -47 in CCL5, which overlap with the GAG-binding 44RKNR47 “BBXB” motifs. Here we report that heparin and tetrasaccharide fragments of heparin are able to inhibit CCL5-CCR1 binding, with IC50 values showing strong dependence on the pattern and extent of sulfation. Modeling of the CCL5-tetrasaccharide complexes suggested that interactions between specific sulfate and carboxylate groups of heparin and residues Arg-17 and -47 of the protein are essential for strong inhibition; tetrasaccharides lacking the specific sulfation pattern were found to preferentially bind CCL5 in positions less favorable for inhibition of the interaction with CCR1. Simulations of a 12-mer heparin fragment bound to CCL5 indicated that the oligosaccharide preferred to interact simultaneously with both 44RKNR47 motifs in the CCL5 homodimer and engaged residues Arg-47 and -17 from both chains. Direct engagement of these residues by the longer heparin oligosaccharide provides a rationalization for its effectiveness as an inhibitor of CCL5-CCR1 interaction. In this mode, histidine (His-23) may contribute to CCL5-GAG interactions when the pH drops just below neutral, as occurs during inflammation. Additionally, an examination of the contribution of pH to modulating CCL5-heparin interactions suggested a need for careful interpretation of experimental results when experiments are performed under non-physiological conditions.
Biochemistry | 2008
Deirdre R. Coombe; Sandra M. Stevenson; Beverley F. Kinnear; Neha S. Gandhi; Ricardo L. Mancera; Ronald Ian William Osmond; Warren C. Kett
Platelet endothelial cell adhesion molecule 1 (PECAM-1) (CD31), a member of the immunoglobulin (Ig) superfamily of cell adhesion molecules with six Ig-like domains, has a range of functions, notably its contributions to leukocyte extravasation during inflammation and in maintaining vascular endothelial integrity. Although PECAM-1 is known to mediate cell adhesion by homophilic binding via domain 1, a number of PECAM-1 heterophilic ligands have been proposed. Here, the possibility that heparin and heparan sulfate (HS) are ligands for PECAM-1 was reinvestigated. The extracellular domain of PECAM-1 was expressed first as a fusion protein with the Fc region of human IgG1 fused to domain 6 and second with an N-terminal Flag tag on domain 1 (Flag-PECAM-1). Both proteins bound heparin immobilized on a biosensor chip in surface plasmon resonance (SPR) binding experiments. Binding was pH-sensitive but is easily measured at slightly acidic pH. A series of PECAM-1 domain deletions, prepared in both expression systems, were tested for heparin binding. This revealed that the main heparin-binding site required both domains 2 and 3. Flag-PECAM-1 and a Flag protein containing domains 1-3 bound HS on melanoma cell surfaces, but a Flag protein containing domains 1-2 did not. Heparin oligosaccharides inhibited Flag-PECAM-1 from binding immobilized heparin, with certain structures having greater inhibitory activity than others. Molecular modeling similarly identified the junction of domains 2 and 3 as the heparin-binding site and further revealed the importance of the iduronic acid conformation for binding. PECAM-1 does bind heparin/HS but by a site that is distinct from that required for homophilic binding.
Spectroscopy | 2004
Warren C. Kett; Deirdre R. Coombe
Mass spectrometry (MS) techniques have spear‒headed the field of proteomics. Recently, MS has been used to structurally analyse carbohydrates. The heparin/heparan sulfate‒like glycosaminoglycans (HLGAGs) present a special set of difficulties for structural analysis because they are highly sulfated and heterogeneous. We have used a matrix‒assisted laser desorption/ionization time of flight mass spectrometry (MALDI‒MS) technique in which heparin fragments are non‒covalently bound to basic peptides of a known mass, so as to limit in‒source desulfation and hence afford an accurate mass. We examined a range of different sized fragments with varying degrees of sulfation. The potential of combining the MALDI‒MS technique with enzymatic digestion to obtain saccharide sequence information on heparin fragments was explored. A disaccharide analysis greatly assists in determining a sequence from MALDI‒MS data. Enzymatic digestion followed by MALDI‒MS allows structural data on heparin fragments too large for direct MALDI‒MS to be obtained. We demonstrate that synthetic sulfated oligosaccharides can also be analysed by MALDI‒MS. There are advantages and limitations with this methodology, but until superior MS techniques become readily accessible to biomedical scientists the MALDI‒MS method provides a means to structurally analyse HLGAG fragments that have therapeutic potential because of their ability to bind to and functionally regulate a host of clinically important proteins.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2003
Siska Cochran; Caiping Li; Jon K. Fairweather; Warren C. Kett; Deirdre R. Coombe; Vito Ferro
Archive | 2009
Warren C. Kett; Deirdre R. Coombe
Archive | 2005
Deirdre R. Coombe; Warren C. Kett; Barbara Mulloy
Analytical Biochemistry | 2005
Warren C. Kett; Ronald Ian William Osmond; Sandra M. Stevenson; Lily Moe; Deirdre R. Coombe