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4-Methylumbelliferyl glucuronide contributes to hyaluronan synthesis inhibition.

Citation
Nagy, N., et al. “4-Methylumbelliferyl Glucuronide Contributes To Hyaluronan Synthesis Inhibition.”. The Journal Of Biological Chemistry, pp. 7864-7877.
Center Stanford University
Author Nadine Nagy, Irina Gurevich, Hedwich F Kuipers, Shannon M Ruppert, Payton L Marshall, Bryan J Xie, Wenchao Sun, Andrey Malkovskiy V, Jayakumar Rajadas, Maria Grandoch, Jens W Fischer, Adam R Frymoyer, Gernot Kaber, Paul L Bollyky
Keywords 2-photon imaging, 4-methylumbelliferone, 4-methylumbelliferyl glucuronide, N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc), autoimmune disease, diabetes, Extracellular matrix, glycosaminoglycan, Hyaluronan, immunology
Abstract

4-Methylumbelliferone (4-MU) inhibits hyaluronan (HA) synthesis and is an approved drug used for managing biliary spasm. However, rapid and efficient glucuronidation is thought to limit its utility for systemically inhibiting HA synthesis. In particular, 4-MU in mice has a short half-life, causing most of the drug to be present as the metabolite 4-methylumbelliferyl glucuronide (4-MUG), which makes it remarkable that 4-MU is effective at all. We report here that 4-MUG contributes to HA synthesis inhibition. We observed that oral administration of 4-MUG to mice inhibits HA synthesis, promotes FoxP3 regulatory T-cell expansion, and prevents autoimmune diabetes. Mice fed either 4-MUG or 4-MU had equivalent 4-MU:4-MUG ratios in serum, liver, and pancreas, indicating that 4-MU and 4-MUG reach an equilibrium in these tissues. LC-tandem MS experiments revealed that 4-MUG is hydrolyzed to 4-MU in serum, thereby greatly increasing the effective bioavailability of 4-MU. Moreover, using intravital 2-photon microscopy, we found that 4-MUG (a nonfluorescent molecule) undergoes conversion into 4-MU (a fluorescent molecule) and that 4-MU is extensively tissue bound in the liver, fat, muscle, and pancreas of treated mice. 4-MUG also suppressed HA synthesis independently of its conversion into 4-MU and without depletion of the HA precursor UDP-glucuronic acid (GlcUA). Together, these results indicate that 4-MUG both directly and indirectly inhibits HA synthesis and that the effective bioavailability of 4-MU is higher than previously thought. These findings greatly alter the experimental and therapeutic possibilities for HA synthesis inhibition.

Year of Publication
2019
Journal
The Journal of biological chemistry
Volume
294
Issue
19
Number of Pages
7864-7877
Date Published
12/2019
ISSN Number
1083-351X
DOI
10.1074/jbc.RA118.006166
Alternate Journal
J. Biol. Chem.
PMID
30914479
PMCID
PMC6514619
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