4.8 Article

Epsin deficiency promotes lymphangiogenesis through regulation of VEGFR3 degradation in diabetes

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION
Volume 128, Issue 9, Pages 4025-4043

Publisher

AMER SOC CLINICAL INVESTIGATION INC
DOI: 10.1172/JCI96063

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. NIH [R01HL-093242, R01HL-118676, R01HL-137229, R01HL-133216, R01HL-130845, P20GM104934, R01HL-096384-07, 1F31HL127982-01]
  2. American Heart Association (AHA)
  3. American Diabetes Association (ADA) [1-12-JF-58]
  4. AHA Scientist Development Grant (SDG) [10SDG, 14BGIA20030027]
  5. Oklahoma Center for the Advancement of Science and Technology (OCAST) [HR11-200, HR14-062, HR17-046, AR11-043, HR14-056, 12SDG8760002]
  6. AHA SDG [17SDG33410868, 17SDG33630161]
  7. AHA fellowship [16POST31210039]
  8. AHA [15PRE21400010]
  9. National Foundation Committee of Natural Sciences of China [NSFC 81570658]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

mpaired lymphangiogenesis is a complication of chronic complex diseases, including diabetes. VEGF-C/VEGFR3 signaling promotes lymphangiogenesis, but how this pathway is affected in diabetes remains poorly understood. We previously demonstrated that loss of epsins 1 and 2 in lymphatic endothelial cells (LECs) prevented VEGF-C-induced VEGFR3 from endocytosis and degradation. Here, we report that diabetes attenuated VEGF-C-induced lymphangiogenesis in corneal micropocket and Matrigel plug assays in WT mice but not in mice with inducible lymphatic-specific deficiency of epsins 1 and 2 (LEC-iDKO). Consistently, LECs isolated from diabetic LEC-iDKO mice elevated in vitro proliferation, migration, and tube formation in response to VEGF-C over diabetic WT mice. Mechanistically, ROS produced in diabetes induced c-Src-dependent but VEGF-C-independent VEGFR3 phosphorylation, and upregulated epsins through the activation of transcription factor AP-1. Augmented epsins bound to and promoted degradation of newly synthesized VEGFR3 in the Golgi, resulting in reduced availability of VEGFR3 at the cell surface. Preclinically, the loss of lymphatic-specific epsins alleviated insufficient lymphangiogenesis and accelerated the resolution of tail edema in diabetic mice. Collectively, our studies indicate that inhibiting expression of epsins in diabetes protects VEGFR3 against degradation and ameliorates diabetes-triggered inhibition of lymphangiogenesis, thereby providing a novel potential therapeutic strategy to treat diabetic complications.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available