RhoB controls coordination of adult angiogenesis and lymphangiogenesis following injury by regulating VEZF1-mediated transcription

  • Damien Gerald
  • , Irit Adini
  • , Sharon Shechter
  • , Carole Perruzzi
  • , Joseph Varnau
  • , Benjamin Hopkins
  • , Shiva Kazerounian
  • , Peter Kurschat
  • , Stephanie Blachon
  • , Santosh Khedkar
  • , Mandrita Bagchi
  • , David Sherris
  • , George C. Prendergast
  • , Michael Klagsbrun
  • , Heidi Stuhlmann
  • , Alan C. Rigby
  • , Janice A. Nagy
  • , Laura E. Benjamin

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

53 Scopus citations

Abstract

Mechanisms governing the distinct temporal dynamics that characterize post-natal angiogenesis and lymphangiogenesis elicited by cutaneous wounds and inflammation remain unclear. RhoB, a stress-induced small GTPase, modulates cellular responses to growth factors, genotoxic stress and neoplastic transformation. Here we show, using RhoB null mice, that loss of RhoB decreases pathological angiogenesis in the ischaemic retina and reduces angiogenesis in response to cutaneous wounding, but enhances lymphangiogenesis following both dermal wounding and inflammatory challenge. We link these unique and opposing roles of RhoB in blood versus lymphatic vasculatures to the RhoB-mediated differential regulation of sprouting and proliferation in primary human blood versus lymphatic endothelial cells. We demonstrate that nuclear RhoB-GTP controls expression of distinct gene sets in each endothelial lineage by regulating VEZF1-mediated transcription. Finally, we identify a small-molecule inhibitor of VEZF1-DNA interaction that recapitulates RhoB loss in ischaemic retinopathy. Our findings establish the first intra-endothelial molecular pathway governing the phased response of angiogenesis and lymphangiogenesis following injury.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2824
JournalNature Communications
Volume4
DOIs
StatePublished - 27 Nov 2013
Externally publishedYes

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