Angiostatic cues from the matrix: Endothelial cell autophagy meets hyaluronan biology

The extracellular matrix encompasses a reservoir of bioactive macromolecules that modulates a cornucopia of biological functions. A prominent body of work posits matrix constituents as master regulators of autophagy and angiogenesis and provides molecular insight into how these two processes are coordinated. Here, we review current understanding of the molecular mechanisms underlying hyaluronan and HAS2 regulation and the role of soluble proteoglycan in affecting autophagy and angiogenesis. Specifically, we assess the role of proteoglycan-evoked autophagy in regulating angiogenesis via the HAS2-hyaluronan axis and ATG9A, a novel HAS2 binding partner. We discuss extracellular hyaluronan biology and the post-transcriptional and post-translational modifications that regulate its main syn-thesizer, HAS2. We highlight the emerging group of proteoglycans that utilize outside-in signaling to modulate autophagy and angiogenesis in cancer microenvironments and thoroughly review the most up-to-date understanding of endorepellin signaling in vascular endothelia, providing insight into the temporal complexities involved.

The extracellular matrix encompasses a reservoir of bioactive macromolecules that modulates a cornucopia of biological functions. A prominent body of work posits matrix constituents as master regulators of autophagy and angiogenesis and provides molecular insight into how these two processes are coordinated.
Here, we review current understanding of the molecular mechanisms underlying hyaluronan and HAS2 regulation and the role of soluble proteoglycan in affecting autophagy and angiogenesis. Specifically, we assess the role of proteoglycan-evoked autophagy in regulating angiogenesis via the HAS2-hyaluronan axis and ATG9A, a novel HAS2 binding partner. We discuss extracellular hyaluronan biology and the post-transcriptional and post-translational modifications that regulate its main synthesizer, HAS2. We highlight the emerging group of proteoglycans that utilize outside-in signaling to modulate autophagy and angiogenesis in cancer microenvironments and thoroughly review the most up-to-date understanding of endorepellin signaling in vascular endothelia, providing insight into the temporal complexities involved.
The extracellular matrix (ECM) consists of a three-dimensional structural scaffold of macromolecules that provides an extensive reservoir of complex signaling molecules, masterfully orchestrating a plethora of biological functions affecting surrounding cells and tissue (1). Among the major macromolecules in the ECM are glycosaminoglycans (GAGs), proteoglycans (PGs), glycoproteins, proteinases, collagens, laminins, fibronectin, and elastin. Often referred to as the "outside-in" cues of the matrix, bioactive extracellular molecules are tightly regulated to bind to receptors such as integrins, certain PGs, CD44, discoidin domain receptors, innate immune receptors, and receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) on the cell surface that initiate specific paracrine and/or autocrine intracellular signaling within the cell (2)(3)(4)(5)(6)(7)(8)(9)(10)(11)(12)(13)(14)(15). Further, the ECM also serves as a reservoir for signaling molecules, such as growth factors and cytokines, as these can bind to specific ECM molecules and are later liberated to bind to their cognate receptors. For example, a variety of signaling effectors bind to heparan sulfate (HS) chains that are later disseminated upon heparanase activity. Matrix metalloproteases function similarly, liberating bound growth factors and cytokines in the ECM to their respective cell-surface receptors (16). These cues synchronize a remarkable array of cellular functions ranging from tissue homeostasis to prolifera-tion, cell migration, wound healing, survival, and development (17)(18)(19).
Here, we review a new and emerging area of ECM biology in which certain PGs and bioactive PG fragments regulate autophagy and angiogenesis (20, 21). We highlight a novel, autophagy-dependent regulation of angiogenesis involving hyaluronan (HA) and hyaluronan synthase 2 (HAS2). This is of increasing importance as PG-induced autophagy and angiogenesis show functional implications in cancer progression. We begin with a general overview of autophagy and its implications in cancer progression. Next, we discuss HA biology and synthesis via HAS2 regulatory mechanisms. We then delve into the major PGs and PG fragments involved, namely endorepellin, decorin, endostatin, biglycan, and lumican, focusing on our current understanding of perlecan and endorepellin signaling. Importantly, we explore HAS2 as a novel link between autophagy and angiogenesis downstream of endorepellin signaling and conclude with open questions and potential implications for future research targeting angiogenesis and autophagy.

Autophagy
Macroautophagy (hereafter referred to as autophagy) is the evolutionarily conserved catabolic process in which cytoplasmic constituents, including superfluous or damaged proteins, lipids, organelles, and intracellular pathogens, are targeted for degradation via the autophagosome-lysosome (22). Originating as a double-membrane, cup-shaped phagophore, the preautophagosomal structure (PAS) recruits lipid bilayer and autophagy protein complexes, expanding its edges around cytoplasmic molecules targeted for degradation and forming a spherical mature autophagosome. These large intracellular vacuoles are then tethered to the microtubule network and trafficked toward the cell center, where lysosomes reside. Following docking and fusion of the autophagosome to the lysosome, lysosomal hydrolases degrade the autophagosomal inner membrane along with its inner cytoplasmic contents (23-25). In mammalian autophagy, this intricate process is regulated and coordinated by a host of ;20 autophagy-related (ATG) proteins (25). The end result of this self-digestion pathway is a recirculation of liberated nucleotides, amino acids, fatty acids, sugars, and ATP that are recycled back into the cell to maintain homeostasis of cell metabolism, survival, and upkeep (22, 26).
Autophagy exerts a strong influence on the pathophysiologies of a multitude of diseases, including neurodegeneration, autoimmune diseases, heart disease, infection, and cancer (25, 27). Specifically, in the cancer cell, autophagy engages in either a pro-or anti-tumorigenic fashion, depending on the stage of carcinogenesis. In the early stages of tumorigenesis, autophagy inhibits tumor initiation, proliferation, and invasion as it suppresses genome mutagenesis, chronic tissue damage, inflammation, cell injury, and the oncogenic aggregation of p62 (28-30). Furthermore, defective autophagy as demonstrated in genetic deletion of autophagic genes Becn1 or Atg7 in mice resulted in spontaneous tumors and malignancy (31-33). Switching roles entirely in later stages of tumorigenesis during invasion and metastasis, autophagy facilitates tumor growth, metabolism, survival, metastasis, and resistance to therapeutic drugs. Mechanistically, this occurs as autophagy protects viability, proliferation, and homeostatic processes of the cancer cell, protecting the cell against various stresses, such as nutrient deprivation, hypoxia, chemotherapy, DNA damage, and metabolic stress (28, 30, 34-37).
As with the majority of cancer research, studies investigating the impact of autophagy have predominantly focused on autophagy in the cancer cell itself. Recently, a growing body of work targeting the tumor microenvironment has emerged demonstrating the critical role of certain proteoglycans that regulate autophagy in peritumoral stromal cells and their influences on cancer angiogenesis (38, 39). The majority of this work focuses on these proteoglycans that modulate angiogenesis in stromal cells as opposed to the cancer cell.
Beyond the cytoprotective function of autophagy to maintain intracellular homeostasis in the endothelium, the processes of autophagy and angiogenesis are not generally understood as being linked. The concept highlighted in this work of inhibiting angiogenesis in vascular endothelial cells via protracted autophagy has only been explored within the context of matrixderived PG signaling. In this review, we further discuss the integration of HA synthesis as a novel mechanistic link connecting these two processes.

Hyaluronan biology
A key player in ECM biology, HA is a ubiquitously expressed and predominant GAG found in all tissues and body fluids, regulating a complex network of functions (40). Although sophisticated in action, HA intrinsically possesses a physical structure that is astonishingly simple, composed of linear repeating disaccharide units of GlcNAc and GlcUA linked by b-(1,3) and b-(1,4) glycosidic bonds (Fig. 1A) (40). It uniquely exists as the only nonsulfated GAG and does not covalently bind to a protein core. Physiologically, HA is synthesized as a high-molecular weight (HMW) polymer (1000-6000 kDa) and possesses impressive hygroscopic properties, capable of retaining up to 1000 times its weight in water. Under pathological conditions, including cancer, inflammation, and tissue remodeling, HMW HA is then fragmented dynamically via hyaluronidases and reactive oxidative species into low-molecular weight (LMW) HA (10-250 kDa) and o-HA (HA oligomers, ,10 kDa). Importantly, HA function varies based on its linear size; HMW HA carries anti-inflammatory, anti-proliferative, and anti-angiogenic properties, whereas LMW HA and o-HA activate immune-stimulatory and pro-angiogenic pathways (Fig. 1A) (40-43). Intriguingly, naked mole rats possessing intrinsically decreased hyaluronidase activity and a unique variant of Has2 that synthesizes extremely large HA (.6000 kDa) are benefited with an unusual resistance to cancer and a lifespan of at least 30 years (44). Whereas the specific mechanisms driving these sizedependent effects of HA are largely unknown, it is likely that HA size in specific contexts fosters interaction with certain binding partners and that undefined co-factors may mediate the interaction between HA and its receptors to collectively bias cellular responses in a particular direction. Together, HA and its extracellular binding partners form coordinated, substantial macromolecular structures that function as insulation and pericellular spatial buffers (40, 45).
Given its biocompatibility, nonimmunogenicity, and biodegradability, HA has been advantageous as a biomaterial used in clinical applications, such as cartilage tissue engineering, cardiac repair following myocardial infarction, drug and molecule delivery, stem cell differentiation, cosmetic moisturizing agents and fillers, and lubricants in osteoarthritic joints (46, 47). Advantageously, the viscosity and elasticity of HA solutions can be modified with its concentration and polymer size, respectively. In addition, the carboxylic acid of GlcUA or the C-6 hydroxyl group of GlcNAc can be further modified via adipic hydrazide, thiopropionyl hydrazide, tyramide, benzyl ester, glycidyl methacrylate, or bromoacetate, further widening its utility and areas of application (48). As a drug delivery biomaterial, negatively charged HA nanoparticles were engineered to deliver positively charged tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand to sites of rheumatoid arthritis in rats. Notably, packaging these ligands in HA nanocomplexes prevents its proteolysis and increases its t ½ in vivo from 30 min to 5 days. In another application, HA was modified with thiol groups and cross-linked via disulfide linkages to form nanogels that can deliver siRNA within aqueous emulsion droplets (49).
Compared with the stability and low turnover rate of most ECM molecules, the rate of HA synthesis and degradation in the ECM is exceedingly high, as 30% of HA in vivo is replenished daily (50). HA is synthesized by a family of hyaluronan synthases (HASs), HAS1-3. Structurally, HAS isoenzymes are multipass transmembrane enzymes possessing large cytosolic loops wherein their glycosyltransferase catalytic activities lie. In this active site, precursors UDP-GlcNAc and UDP-GlcUA polymerize into linear HA chains and concurrently extrude through the plasma membrane via the HAS protein into the extracellular space (51). Functionally, HASs are enzymatically active at the plasma membrane. However, a substantial pool of enzymatically inactive, N-glycosylated HASs are localized in the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi apparatus (52, 53).
Of all the HASs, HAS2 is the main producer of HA (51, 54). For instance, global deletion of Has2 in mouse embryos severely stunts cardiac and vascular development and is embryonically lethal (55). In comparison, Has1 and Has3 knockout mice are both phenotypically viable but exhibit malformations in the retro-calcaneal bursa adjacent to the Achilles tendon (56) and vascular smooth muscle migration and neuronal development (57, 58), respectively.

Regulation of HA synthesis via HAS2 modifications and nutrient availability
HA synthesis is modulated through the finely tuned regulation of HASs through transcriptional expression of HAS1-3, post-transcriptional regulation via miRNAs and long noncoding RNAs, and post-translational modifications. As a transcription factor that drives epithelial-mesenchymal transition, tumorigenesis, and metastasis, zinc finger E-box binding homeobox 1 binds to the HAS2 promoter region and activates its transcription in breast cancer cells (59). Furthermore, transcription factors T-box transcription factor 4, retinoic acid receptor, signal transducer and activator of transcription 3, specificity proteins 1 and 3, NF-kB, and cAMP-responsive element binding protein 1 also bind to the HAS2 promoter region and regulate its expression (60-62).
HAS2 is regulated by a variety of post-translational modifications (67). For example, monoubiquitination of HAS2 at lysine 190 located in the glycosyltransferase-2 conserved domain is critical for its enzymatic activity (68). Nutrient conditions also heavily influence HAS2 expression and activity via post-translational regulation. Most notably, AMP kinase (AMPK), the master rheostat of cellular energy homeostasis, plays critical roles in regulating HAS2 and extracellular HA. Under nutrientscarce conditions (i.e. high levels of AMP and low levels of ATP), AMPK is activated and phosphorylates HAS2 at threonine 110 located in the cytoplasmic active site. This significantly attenuates the enzymatic activity of HAS2 (69). Low-nutrient conditions, also represented by an increased NAD 1 / NADH ratio, activate an NAD 1 -dependent deacetylase, sirtuin 1. In turn, sirtuin 1 inhibits NF-kB activation and reduces HAS2-AS1 levels. Ultimately, this decreases HAS2 expression and HA accumulation (70).
In contrast, hyperglycemic and nutrient-rich conditions wherein there are high extracellular levels of glucosamine and UDP-GlcNAc increase O-GlcNAcylation of HAS2, which promotes its enzymatic activity and protein stability (71). Following a similar trend, epigenetic O-GlcNAcylation of histones, including H3 at serine 10, in the proximal promoter region of HAS2 promotes chromatin remodeling and induces HAS2-AS1 and subsequently HAS2 expression (63).
Glucose availability plays a critical role in regulating extracellular HA levels. As input levels naturally determine output yield, low environmental glucose levels result in scarcity of the UDP-sugar substrates utilized by HAS2, leading to suppression of synthesized HA. Conversely, in hyperglycemic conditions with higher levels of UDP-GlcUA and UDP-GlcNAc, extracellular HA also increase. Indeed, when depleting UDP-GlcUA levels pharmacologically via 4-methylumbelliferone (4-MU), HAS2 enzymatic activity and HA levels are suppressed (72). Specifically, 4-MU is glucuronidated by endogenous UDP-glucuronyltransferases using UDP-GlcUA as the donor, thereby decreasing a necessary precursor for HA biosynthesis. Additionally, through an unknown mechanism, 4-MU also significantly decreases HAS2 mRNA (73,74).
Lipid availability, as reflected by intracellular levels of prostaglandins, oxysterols, and cholesterol, also play a significant role in nutrient-associated HAS2 regulation. For instance, vasodilatory prostaglandins I 2 and E 2 induced HAS2 expression via cAMP/PKA-dependent G s -coupled IP and EP 2 signaling in human vascular smooth muscle cells (SMCs) (75,76). This prostaglandin-dependent regulation of HAS2 in human saphenous vein SMCs is thought to play a role in driving the progression of atherosclerosis in saphenous vein bypass graft failure (77). Separately, oxidized low-density lipoproteins also drive atherosclerotic progression via increasing HAS2 expression in human aortic SMCs (78,79). Finally, the addition of cholesterol in human dermal fibroblasts increased HAS2 activity in liposomes formed by saturated phosphatidylcholine (80), and depleting cholesterol with methyl-b-cyclodextrin down-regulated HAS2 levels via the phosphoinositide 3-kinase-Akt pathway in MCF-7 cells (81).

Proteoglycan signaling via outside-in cues
PGs are a heterogeneous family of at least 43 protein cores with one or more covalently attached, sulfated GAG chains. Based predominantly on location, homology and protein modules, PGs are categorized into four major classes: intracellular, cell-surface, pericellular, and extracellular (5, 82). Functioning beyond mere co-receptors that present growth factors to their cognate receptors, PGs play critical roles as signaling effectors themselves. Localized predominantly at the cell surface and extracellular space, they constitute a critical component of the ECM as they oversee a myriad of processes, such as angiogenesis, morphogenesis, extracellular supramolecular assembly, migration, proliferation, cell survival, and immune regulation (8, 38, 83).
Recently, a growing body of work has emerged demonstrating the critical role of specific proteoglycans that regulate autophagy in stromal cells and their influences on physiological and cancer neovascularization ( Fig. 1B) (38, 39). Additionally, HSPGs, HS biosynthesis, and HS-dependent signaling in the extracellular space are critical in activating autophagy in muscle and fat cells in Drosophila (84). Overall, the most extensively studied proteoglycans and bioactive proteoglycan fragments that signal via outside-in cues from the ECM include endorepellin, endostatin, decorin, biglycan, and lumican (Fig. 1B). These modulate autophagy in stromal cells as well as, in some cases, the cancer cell directly.
Endostatin, the N-terminal fragment of the HSPG collagen XVIII, is a basement membrane proteoglycan fragment that wields pro-autophagic and anti-angiogenic effects on vascular endothelial cells (85). Direct binding to VEGFR2 blocks VEGFinduced VEGFR2 activation, downstream angiogenic signaling and VEGF expression (86,87). Further, endostatin also signals through a 5 b 1 integrin on the endothelial cell surface to concurrently inhibit cell migration (88) and induce autophagy (89). Notably, through its outside-in signaling on the tumor vasculature, endostatin inhibited tumor angiogenesis in both malignant keratinocytes and mammary tumors in vivo (87).
Biglycan is a small leucine-rich proteoglycan that, unlike decorin and endorepellin, promotes neovascularization in the tumor microenvironment. Mechanistically, biglycan up-regulates VEGFA expression and physically binds VEGFA, thereby indirectly promoting pro-angiogenic VEGFA-VEGFR2 signaling (110,111). Tumor endothelial cells also hypomethylate the BGN promoter, epigenetically promoting biglycan expression and supporting tumor vascularization in metastatic cancers (112,113). Separately, biglycan curtails inflammatory renal damage via triggering autophagy in human and murine peripheral blood macrophages via binding TLR4 and CD44 (9). Through TLR4 signaling, biglycan also activates autophagy in cardiomyocytes that confers protection to cardiomyocytes following ischemia and reperfusion injury (114). Although the effects of biglycan stimulating autophagy in macrophages have not been explored in a cancer model, investigation into whether biglycan aids tumor angiogenesis and growth partly via inducing autophagy in tumor-associated macrophages would contribute valuable understanding to the intricate role of extracellular matrix-evoked autophagy in cancer.
Lumican is another small leucine-rich proteoglycan that regulates collagen fibrillogenesis, embryonic development, wound healing, and tumor progression (115)(116)(117)(118)(119)(120)(121). In the context of pancreatic cancer, stromal lumican is primarily secreted from pancreatic stellate cells (122) and exerts an anti-tumor effect where high stromal levels of lumican are closely associated with decreased recurrence and increased survival following surgical resection. Downstream of binding and antagonizing EGFR in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC), lumican suppresses Akt and HIF-1a signaling to inhibit glycolysis and apoptosis (123). Notably in PDAC, extracellular lumican inhibits gemcitabine-induced autophagy, a protective response to chemotherapy treatment, via down-regulating AMPK activity (124). Given the low efficacy of chemotherapeutics against pancreatic cancer, data revealing potent cytotoxicity in PDAC via lumican and gemcitabine co-treatment posit lumican as a promising ECM-derived protein therapy to sensitize cancer cells to chemotherapeutics. Separately, hypoxia-induced autophagy in pancreatic stellate cells suppress lumican production via autophagic degradation and decreased protein synthesis (122).
Endorepellin, the C-terminal domain V of perlecan, exerts its pro-autophagic and angiostatic influence on stromal endothelial cells via dual binding of VEGFR2 and a2b1 integrin, cellsurface receptors that are exclusively co-expressed in vascular endothelia. In the context of cancer, endorepellin exerts profound anti-oncogenic effects by specifically targeting the tumor neovasculature, thus reducing blood flow to the growing cancer cells (18). Specifically, when utilizing recombinant endorepellin to systemically treat human squamous carcinoma and murine Lewis lung carcinoma in vivo, endorepellin accumulates explicitly in the tumor vasculature, where it markedly suppresses tumor angiogenesis, metabolism, and growth while inducing intratumoral hypoxia (125).
Perlecan plays a fascinating role in regulating autophagy and angiogenesis that is complex and has been extensively studied in the past decade. As a whole molecule, perlecan inhibits autophagy in the slow-twitch soleus muscle of mice through activation of the mTOR complex 1 (mTORC1) pathway. Specifically, mice that lack HSPG2 expression in muscles showed increased autophagy through mTORC1 inhibition when fasted for 24 h as demonstrated by increased levels of LC3-II, a critical component of the autophagosomal membrane, and P-AMPKa, the a subunit of the energy sensor AMPK that induces autophagy signaling downstream (85,152), and decreased mTORC1 substrate P-p70S6K (153).
Regarding its role in modulating angiogenesis, perlecan in its entirety possesses critical pro-angiogenic capabilities. Indeed, perlecan-null mice are embryonic lethal around embryonic day 10 with perlecan-deficient embryos displaying gross cardiovascular malformations, such as irregular cardiac outflow tracts, complete transposition of great arteries, and malformed semilunar valves (154). Additionally, zebrafish with a knockdown of Hspg2 expression show stunted angiogenic sprouting from the dorsal aorta and malformed intersegmental and subintestinal vessels (132). The mechanism fostering this pro-angiogenic phenotype lies within the three Ser-Gly-Asp sequences found within the N-terminal domain I of perlecan (155). These function as attachment sites for HS chains, which can then bind, sequester, and present a number of growth factors to their cognate receptors (156)(157)(158). These growth factors include a host of HS-binding angiokines, including progranulin, VEGFA, platelet-derived growth factor, fibroblast growth factor 2 (FGF2), FGF7, and FGF18 (159)(160)(161)(162)(163)(164). For example, perlecan promotes FGF2 interaction with its receptor to induce neovascularization in rabbit ears (165), and mice expressing a mutant perlecan containing a partial deletion of domain I in which all three HS attachment sites were annihilated show stunted angiogenesis in the cornea (166). In another example, perlecan increases VEGFA-induced activation and phosphorylation of VEGF receptor 2 (VEGFR2) (161). In regard to tumorigenesis, perlecan levels are elevated in multiple cancer cell lines and human metastatic melanoma (3,(167)(168)(169), and its ability to function as reservoir and co-receptor for angiokines enhances tumor growth and invasion (144,162,166,170,171).

Temporal signaling of angiostatic and autophagic endorepellin
Through its three LG domains, endorepellin elegantly coordinates intracellular signaling of vascular endothelial cells as a dual receptor ligand as it binds simultaneously to the major vascular RTK, VEGFR2 (188), and a2b1 integrin (189,190) (Fig.  2). As the dual expression of VEGFR2 and a2b1 is unique to vascular endothelia and as endorepellin requires both receptors for its angiostatic activity (189), the binding and downstream effects of soluble endorepellin are specific to vascular endothelial cells. Mechanistically, LG1/2 bind the Ig 3-5 motifs of the VEGFR2 ectodomain (191,192), whereas LG3 concurrently binds the a2 integrin I domain of a2b1 (190,193,194). This "dual receptor antagonism" of endorepellin ultimately evokes angiostasis and autophagy in endothelial cells. However, endorepellin signaling through its two cognate receptors is intricate and complex. At the transient level (within 5-10 min of binding), endorepellin signals as a dual receptor antagonist and allosterically inhibits VEGFA-induced angiogenesis (189,191,192,195). However, after long-term binding, this angiostatic molecule evolves into a partial agonist, where it collectively evokes autophagy and suppresses angiogenesis primarily through VEGFR2 binding (152,196).

HAS2, the critical link between autophagy and angiostasis
Although endorepellin-induced autophagy led to downstream angiostasis (196), the mechanism linking these two intracellular processes remained a mystery. As such, the direct link connecting autophagic activation and angiostasis has been highly anticipated. Recently, we uncovered a critical and novel regulatory mechanism in which HAS2, a key producer of proangiogenic HA, is degraded via autophagy evoked by pro-autophagic proteoglycan fragments endorepellin and endostatin, nutrient deprivation, or mTOR inhibition. This was consistently demonstrated across a variety of cell types and species in vitro as well as at the organ level in heart and aorta tissue lysates of fasted mice in vivo (203). Notably, endorepellin induces downstream autophagic catabolism of HAS2 via VEGFR2 signaling and downstream AMPK activation under nutrient-rich conditions. Pharmacologically, AICAR, an activator of AMPK, and Torin 1 and INK128, potent inhibitors of mTOR, all phenocopy nutrient deprivation and endorepellin treatment in down-regulating cellular HAS2 levels via autophagy. This reduction of HAS2 levels translates to robust suppression of extracellular HA in vitro and ex vivo (203). Notably, marked decrease in extracellular HA via HAS2 degradation inhibits angiogenic sprouting ex vivo (203), effectively positing autophagic catabolism of HAS2 as a critical regulatory pathway linking autophagy to angiostasis (Fig. 4).
In support of these findings, HAS2 catalysis through the proteasome was ruled out, as inhibiting proteasomal activity via MG132 did not significantly alter total levels of HAS2 or synthesized HA (68). HAS2 regulation has also been shown to be downstream of mTOR, as mTOR activation in fibroblasts increased HAS2 levels and extracellular HA. Furthermore, inhibiting mTOR via rapamycin significantly reversed this effect (204). In fact, activating AMPK through metformin treatment has also been shown to down-regulate HA synthesis in vascular smooth muscle cells (205), further supporting an AMPK-dependent down-regulation of HAS2.

ATG9A, a novel HAS2-binding partner
One continuing area of investigation in the study of autophagy is the source of lipid membrane that forms the growing autophagosome. Notably, the endoplasmic reticulum, mitochondria, Golgi complex, and plasma membrane have all been implicated as sources (22, 23). Among the ATG proteins, ATG9A plays a key role in transporting lipid membrane from these sources and stands apart as the only multipass transmembrane protein, a characteristic that is key to its function. Whereas its roles have not been fully elucidated, it is best defined as a shuttling protein within the ATG2-WIPI (WD-repeat protein interacting with phosphoinositides) complex that cycles between the PAS and peripheral organelles, including the trans-Golgi network, endosomes, and plasma membrane, to deliver lipid bilayer to the developing phagophore (25, [206][207][208][209]. In coordination with the core autophagic machinery, ATG9A is phosphorylated by ULK kinase core complex, a post-translational modification that is necessary to recruit LC3 to the site of autophagosome nucleation and expansion (210). During this process, ATG9A integrates into the outer autophagosomal membrane and is removed and recycled back after formation of the mature autophagosome is complete (211,212).
Structurally, ATG9A possesses six transmembrane domains flanked by two cytosolic domains, one at each of the N-and C-terminal regions (25,213). Similarly, HAS2 shares a structural topology akin to that of ATG9A, as it is also characterized by six transmembrane domains with both N-and C-terminal tail regions residing in the cytosol (214). Furthermore, both ATG9A and HAS2 have the ability to homodimerize. This self-interaction enables ATG9A to move anterograde to the PAS (215). Likewise, HASs may form homo-and heterodimer complexes with one another through their N-terminal domains (i.e. HAS1-HAS2, HAS2-HAS2, and HAS2-HAS3) (216), a structural quality critical in aiding HA synthesis (68,69,216). Given these shared qualities, we recently discovered that HAS2 binds ATG9A upon autophagic induction, implicating ATG9A as the protein carrier bringing HAS2 to the autophagosomal membrane. This was confirmed via enhanced pulldown of HAS2 when immunoprecipitating ATG9A in endorepellin-and mTOR inhibitor Torin 1-treated endothelial cells and increased co-localization of HAS2 and ATG9A under superresolution microscopy (203). Specifically, Torin 1-treated human umbilical vein endothelial cells demonstrated distinct vacuoles positively immunostained with ATG9A and HAS2 in contrast to vehicletreated ones. Furthermore, this is a dynamic interaction as livecell microscopy of porcine aortic endothelial cells transfected with RFP-ATG9A and GFP-HAS2 showed rapid formation of ATG9A-and HAS2-positive nucleating complexes within 10 and 2 min of endorepellin treatment and nutrient deprivation, respectively (203). Of note, autophagy-stimulated endothelial cells did not demonstrate HAS2 binding to either p62 or LC3-II, two wellstudied proteins that selectively transport proteins to the  autophagosome, effectively ruling out p62 and LC3-II involvement in facilitating HAS2 degradation (203).

Perspective and open questions
Surrounding every cell and tissue, the ECM modulates and affects the most overarching physiological functions of the body down to myriad subcellular processes. Within this expansive system, the functional class of proteoglycans that modulates autophagy and angiogenesis via external signaling from the matrix is emerging and evolving into an exciting field in ECM biology. Certainly, with regard to cancer as well as to myriad other diseases, there is an increasing demand for drugs aimed at counteracting processes from the microenvironment, such as angiogenesis, that exacerbate disease progression. The introduction of HAS2 catalysis via autophagy as a means of regulating extracellular HA brings forth a greater understanding of the implications of autophagic induction, particularly within the realm of cancer treatment. This newfound intersection between autophagy, angiogenesis, and hyaluronan biology not only promotes our understanding hyaluronan and proteoglycan biology, but also provides an alternative strategy to curtail pathologic angiogenesis via inciting autophagy within the vasculature. Beyond HAS2-HA regulation, it is very likely that more unknown factors connecting autophagy and angiogenesis are present. Further, as the field expands, it is likely that other proteoglycans and extracellular factors will be found to modulate autophagy and angiogenesis, strengthening the tie between these two vital processes.
Notwithstanding these paramount advances in interconnecting the fields of proteoglycan signaling, HA synthesis, autophagy, and angiogenesis, there still exist large gaps and questions in our current understanding of HA dynamics that have yet to be resolved. First, what are the general mechanisms fueling size-dependent HA biology? More specifically, how does LMW HA drive angiogenic pathways at the vasculature? Second, whereas the regulatory mechanism of autophagy restricting extracellular HA focuses on HAS2, the main HAS isoform responsible for HA synthesis, are HAS1/3 also subjected to autophagic degradation? If so, do these changes in HAS1/3 levels significantly alter HA content in the matrix? Third, to further elucidate the potential role of ATG9A-HAS2 interaction in the autophagic process, is ATG9A-HAS2 binding necessary for autophagy-evoked HAS2 degradation and the subsequent decrease in secreted HA? Furthermore, does HAS2 interact with WIPI1/2 or ATG2, the two other autophagy proteins in complex with ATG9A that regulate its cycling and nucleation of LC3-positive autophagosomes (25). If so, is HAS2 itself a contributor to autophagosome development and nucleation? Fourth, the disease-driving build-up of HA in invasive breast cancer is characterized by a conglomeration of excessive hyaluronan synthase activity and HA breakdown via hyaluronidases and reactive oxygen species, resulting in an accumulation of LMW HA and HA oligosaccharides that propel tumor angiogenesis, metastasis, and inflammation and shorten overall patient survival (217). Thus, what are the therapeutic implications of HAS2 catabolism and their ensuing effects on dysregulated angiogenesis in diseases exacerbated by HA accumulation, such as cancer? As elevated levels of stromal HA transduce pro-angio-genic and tumorigenic signals in a multitude of other cancer types, including breast, prostate, ovarian, and lung (217), the therapeutic benefits of targeting HAS2 via autophagic degradation in these cancer types should be explored. Finally, independent of HAS activity and levels, there is increasing evidence that the metabolic reprogramming of cancer cells favoring glycolysis greatly up-regulates HA synthesis. Metabolic reprogramming, encompassed through the Warburg effect, drives tumorigenic growth and progression. Specifically, aggressive breast cancer demonstrates increased flux through the hexosamine biosynthetic pathway and enhanced cellular stores of GlcNAc, thereby significantly up-regulating HA synthesis and driving pro-tumorigenic signaling (218). Thus, in efforts to comprehensively target HA in the tumor microenvironment, the biology overseeing these metabolic changes in cancer and stromal metabolism adds yet another layer of complexity requiring further study.
Acknowledgments-We thank Thomas Neill, Simone Buraschi, and Aastha Kapoor for critical reading of the manuscript and for insightful discussions.
Funding and additional information-This work was supported in part by National Institutes of Health Grants RO1 CA39481, CA47282, and CA245311 (to R. V. I.) and T32 AR052273 (to C. G. C.). The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health.
Conflict of interest-The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest with the contents of this article.