Background: Epidermal growth factor-like domain 7 (Egfl7) is a chemoattractant for endothelial cells, and its expression is restricted to endothelial cells. Hypoxia/reoxygenation (H/R) induced endothelial injury that occurs during transplantation contributes to the subsequent development of allograft vasculopathy. We investigated the effect of Egfl7 on endothelial cell intercellular adhesion molecule 1 expression in response to H/R injury.

Methods And Results: Human coronary artery endothelial cells were submitted to hypoxia (0.1% O(2)) followed by normoxia (21% O(2)) in the presence or absence of Egfl7 (100 ng/mL). Hypoxia alone increased the expression of Egfl7×140±8% of control at 3 hours (n=6; P<0.05) and 385±50% of control at 6 hours (n=6; P<0.001). Incubation with Egfl7 during the reoxygenation period prevented intercellular adhesion molecule 1 upregulation (mean fluorescence intensity: 5.37±0.92 versus 3.81±0.21; P<0.05; n=4 per group). Nuclear factor-κB nuclear localization on H/R injury was blocked by Egfl7 administration (cytosolic/nuclear ratio of 0.93±0.01 versus 1.44±0.24; P<0.05; n=4 per group). Inhibitor of nuclear factor-κB protein level was significantly reduced on H/R injury (26±4.6% of control expression; P<0.05; n=4 per group); however, concurrent incubation with Egfl7 attenuated this reduction (46±6.2% of control expression; P<0.05 when compared with H/R injury alone; n=4 per group).

Conclusions: Our study reveals the novel observation that hypoxia upregulates human coronary artery endothelial cells expression of Egfl7 and that Egfl7 inhibits expression of intercellular adhesion molecule 1 subsequent to H/R injury. Mechanistically, Egfl7 prevented nuclear factor-κB nuclear localization and augmented inhibitor of nuclear factor-κB protein levels, suggesting that it inhibits nuclear factor-κB activation, a key step in the inflammatory activation of endothelial cells. Egfl7 may be protective against H/R injury incurred during transplantation and may modulate the events that lead to the development of graft vasculopathy.

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