Restoration of vascular perfusion in peripheral arterial disease involves a combination of neovessel formation and the functional restoration of vascular endothelium. Previous studies indicated that ligand-dependent PPARδ activation enhances angiogenesis. However, how PPARδ is triggered by hypoxia and its downstream effects during post-ischemic vascular repair was not well understood. We induced experimental hindlimb ischemia in endothelial cell selective knockout induced by Cdh5-Cre mediated deletion of floxed Ppard allele in mice and their wild type control and observed blood perfusion, capillary density, vascular relaxation, and vascular leakage. Deletion of endothelial delayed perfusion recovery and tissue repair, accompanied by delayed post-ischemic angiogenesis, impaired restoration of vascular integrity, more vascular leakage and enhanced inflammatory responses. At the molecular level, hypoxia upregulated and activated PPARδ in endothelial cells, whereas PPARδ reciprocally stabilized HIF1α protein to prevent its ubiquitin-mediated degradation. PPARδ directly bound to the oxygen-dependent degradation domain of HIF1α at the ligand-dependent domain of PPARδ. Importantly, this HIF1α-PPARδ interaction was independent of PPARδ ligand. Adeno-associated virus mediated endothelium-targeted overexpression of stable HIF1α improved perfusion recovery, suppressed vascular inflammation, and enhanced vascular repair, to counteract with the effect of knockout after hindlimb ischemia in mice. In summary, hypoxia-induced, ligand-independent activation of PPARδ in ECs stabilizes HIF1α and serves as a critical regulator for HIF1α activation to facilitate the post-ischemic restoration of vascular homeostasis.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8825601 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.7150/thno.69017 | DOI Listing |
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