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p75(NTR)-dependent activation of NF-κB regulates microRNA-503 transcription and pericyte-endothelial crosstalk in diabetes after limb ischaemia.

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journal contribution
posted on 2017-08-25, 13:55 authored by Andrea Caporali, Marco Meloni, Audrey Nailor, Tijana Mitić, Saran Shantikumar, Federica Riu, Graciela B. Sala-Newby, Lorraine Rose, Marie Besnier, Rajesh Katare, Christine Voellenkle, Paul Verkade, Fabio Martelli, Paolo Madeddu, Costanza Emanueli
The communication between vascular endothelial cells (ECs) and pericytes in the microvasculature is fundamental for vascular growth and homeostasis; however, these processes are disrupted by diabetes. Here we show that modulation of p75(NTR) expression in ECs exposed to high glucose activates transcription of miR-503, which negatively affects pericyte function. p75(NTR) activates NF-κB to bind the miR-503 promoter and upregulate miR-503 expression in ECs. NF-κB further induces activation of Rho kinase and shedding of endothelial microparticles carrying miR-503, which transfer miR-503 from ECs to vascular pericytes. The integrin-mediated uptake of miR-503 in the recipient pericytes reduces expression of EFNB2 and VEGFA, resulting in impaired migration and proliferation. We confirm operation of the above mechanisms in mouse models of diabetes, in which EC-derived miR-503 reduces pericyte coverage of capillaries, increased permeability and impaired post-ischaemic angiogenesis in limb muscles. Collectively, our data demonstrate that miR-503 regulates pericyte-endothelial crosstalk in microvascular diabetic complications.

Funding

A.C. is a BHF Intermediate Research Fellow and the University of Edinburgh Chancellor’s Fellow; A.C. acknowledges Edinburgh BHF Research Excellence Award. C.E. is a BHF Professor in Cardiovascular Science. This study was supported by grants from British Heart Foundation (BHF) (FS/11/52/29018 and FS/10/61/28566), Fondazione Cariplo n. 2013-0887 and Leducq Foundation Transatlantic Award on vascular microRNAs (MIRVAD). The study was also supported by the National Institute of Health Research (NIHR), through Bristol Biomedical Research Unit (BRU) in Cardiovascular Medicine. The Bristol, Edinburgh and Glasgow authors are part of the BHF Regenerative Medicine Centre.

History

Citation

Nature Communications, 2015, 6, Article 8024

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND PSYCHOLOGY/School of Medicine/Department of Health Sciences

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Nature Communications

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group

eissn

2041-1723

Acceptance date

2015-07-09

Copyright date

2017

Available date

2017-08-25

Publisher version

https://www.nature.com/articles/ncomms9024

Notes

Accession codes: miRNA array expression data have been deposited in the NCBI Gene Expression Omnibus database under accession code GSE53899. Supplementary information accompanies this paper at http://www.nature.com/naturecommunications

Language

en