4.8 Article

Antiangiogenic VEGF165b Regulates Macrophage Polarization via S100A8/S100A9 in Peripheral Artery Disease

Journal

CIRCULATION
Volume 139, Issue 2, Pages 226-242

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.118.034165

Keywords

alternative splicing; intercellular signaling peptides and proteins; therapeutics; angiogenesis inducing agents; autocrine communication; paracrine communication; cell communication

Funding

  1. American Heart Association Scientist Development Grant [16SDG30340002]
  2. National Institutes of Health [1R01 HL116455, 1R01 HL121635, 2R01 HL101200]

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Background: Atherosclerotic occlusions decrease blood flow to the lower limbs, causing ischemia and tissue loss in patients with peripheral artery disease (PAD). No effective medical therapies are currently available to induce angiogenesis and promote perfusion recovery in patients with severe PAD. Clinical trials aimed at inducing vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)-A levels, a potent proangiogenic growth factor to induce angiogenesis, and perfusion recovery were not successful. Alternate splicing in the exon-8 of VEGF-A results in the formation of VEGFxxxa (VEGF(165)a) and VEGFxxxb (VEGF(165)b) isoforms with existing literature focusing on VEGF(165)b's role in inhibiting vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 2-dependent angiogenesis. However, we have recently shown that VEGF(165)b blocks VEGF-A-induced endothelial vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 1 (VEGFR1) activation in ischemic muscle to impair perfusion recovery. Because macrophage-secreted VEGF(165)b has been shown to decrease angiogenesis in peripheral artery disease, and macrophages were well known to play important roles in regulating ischemic muscle vascular remodeling, we examined the role of VEGF(165)b in regulating macrophage function in PAD. Methods: Femoral artery ligation and resection were used as an in vivo preclinical PAD model, and hypoxia serum starvation was used as an in vitro model for PAD. Experiments including laser-Doppler perfusion imaging, adoptive cell transfer to ischemic muscle, immunoblot analysis, ELISAs, immunostainings, flow cytometry, quantitative polymerase chain reaction analysis, and RNA sequencing were performed to determine a role of VEGF(165)b in regulating macrophage phenotype and function in PAD. Results: First, we found increased VEGF(165)b expression with increased M1-like macrophages in PAD versus non-PAD (controls) muscle biopsies. Next, using in vitro hypoxia serum starvation, in vivo preclinical PAD models, and adoptive transfer of VEGF(165)b-expressing bone marrow-derived macrophages or VEGFR1(+/-) bone marrow-derived macrophages (M1-like phenotype), we demonstrate that VEGF(165)b inhibits VEGFR1 activation to induce an M1-like phenotype that impairs ischemic muscle neovascularization. Subsequently, we found S100A8/S100A9 as VEGFR1 downstream regulators of macrophage polarization by RNA-Seq analysis of hypoxia serum starvation-VEGFR1(+/+) versus hypoxia serum starvation-VEGFR1(+/-) bone marrow-derived macrophages. Conclusions: In our current study, we demonstrate that increased VEGF(165)b expression in macrophages induces an antiangiogenic M1-like phenotype that directly impairs angiogenesis. VEGFR1 inhibition by VEGF(165)b results in S100A8/S100A9-mediated calcium influx to induce an M1-like phenotype that impairs ischemic muscle revascularization and perfusion recovery.

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