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EPHB4-RASA1 Inhibition of PIEZO1 Ras Activation Drives Lymphatic Valvulogenesis. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • - EPHB4 and RASA1 are essential for the formation and maintenance of lymphatic vessel (LV) valves during development, but how they interact in this process is not fully understood.
  • - The study used both genetically modified mice and human lymphatic endothelial cells to show that disrupting EPHB4 or RASA1 significantly impairs LV valve specification and development, which can be countered by targeting the Ras-MAPK signaling pathway.
  • - The findings indicate that proper function of EPHB4 and RASA1 is crucial for successful LV valve development, with potential implications for understanding lymphatic diseases or conditions related to valve dysfunction.

Article Abstract

Background: EPHB4 (ephrin receptor B4) and the RASA1 (p120 Ras GTPase-activating protein) are necessary for the development of lymphatic vessel (LV) valves. However, precisely how EPHB4 and RASA1 regulate LV valve development is unknown. In this study, we examine the mechanisms by which EPHB4 and RASA1 regulate the development of LV valves.

Methods: We used LV-specific inducible EPHB4-deficient mice and EPHB4 knockin mice that express a form of EPHB4 that is unable to bind RASA1 yet retains protein tyrosine kinase activity (EPHB4 2YP) to study the role of EPHB4 and RASA1 in LV valve development in the embryo and LV valve maintenance in adults. We also used human dermal lymphatic endothelial cells in vitro to study the role of EPHB4 and RASA1 as regulators of LV valve specification induced by oscillatory shear stress, considered the trigger for LV valve specification in vivo.

Results: LV valve specification, continued valve development postspecification, and LV valve maintenance were blocked upon induced loss of EPHB4 in LV. LV valve specification and maintenance were also impaired in EPHB4 2YP mice. Defects in LV valve development were reversed by inhibition of the Ras-MAPK (mitogen-activated protein kinase) signaling pathway. In human dermal lymphatic endothelial cells, loss of expression of EPHB4 or its ephrin b2 ligand, loss of expression of RASA1, and inhibition of physical interaction between EPHB4 and RASA1 resulted in dysregulated oscillatory shear stress-induced Ras-MAPK activation and impaired expression of LV specification markers that could be rescued by Ras-MAPK pathway inhibition. The same results were observed when human dermal lymphatic endothelial cells were stimulated with the Yoda1 agonist of the PIEZO1 oscillatory shear stress sensor. Although Yoda1 increased the number of LV valves when administered to wild-type embryos, it did not increase LV valve number when administered to EPHB4 2YP embryos.

Conclusions: EPHB4 is necessary for LV valve specification, continued valve development postspecification, and valve maintenance. LV valve specification requires physical interaction between EPHB4 and RASA1 to limit activation of the Ras-MAPK pathway in lymphatic endothelial cells. Specifically, EPHB4-RASA1 physical interaction is necessary to dampen Ras-MAPK activation induced through the PIEZO1 oscillatory shear stress sensor. These findings reveal the mechanism by which EPHB4 and RASA1 regulate the development of LV valves.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11560524PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.124.325383DOI Listing

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