4.8 Article

The P-type ATPase transporter ATP7A promotes angiogenesis by limiting autophagic degradation of VEGFR2

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-23408-1

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Department of Veterans Affairs Merit [2I01BX001232, 17POST33660754]
  2. Foundation Jerome Lejeune
  3. Department of Defense [PR080428]
  4. St.Baldrick's Foundation
  5. Searle Funds at The Chicago Community Trust
  6. Center for Clinical and Translational Science at UIC
  7. NIH National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences [UL1TR00050]
  8. [NIHR01HL135584]
  9. [NIHR01HL133613]
  10. [NIHR01HL116976]
  11. [NIHR01HL070187]
  12. [NIHR01HL090651]

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This study reveals a previously unknown interaction between the Copper transporter ATP7A, autophagy, and VEGFR2 degradation in endothelial cells, highlighting the importance of ATP7A in regulating VEGFR2 signaling and angiogenesis. The findings suggest that ATP7A acts as a potential therapeutic target for ischemic cardiovascular diseases by promoting VEGFR2-mediated angiogenesis and neovascularization.
VEGFR2 (KDR/Flk1) signaling in endothelial cells (ECs) plays a central role in angiogenesis. The P-type ATPase transporter ATP7A regulates copper homeostasis, and its role in VEGFR2 signaling and angiogenesis is entirely unknown. Here, we describe the unexpected crosstalk between the Copper transporter ATP7A, autophagy, and VEGFR2 degradation. The functional significance of this Copper transporter was demonstrated by the finding that inducible EC-specific ATP7A deficient mice or ATP7A-dysfunctional ATP7Amut mice showed impaired post-ischemic neovascularization. In ECs, loss of ATP7A inhibited VEGF-induced VEGFR2 signaling and angiogenic responses, in part by promoting ligand-induced VEGFR2 protein degradation. Mechanistically, VEGF stimulated ATP7A translocation from the trans-Golgi network to the plasma membrane where it bound to VEGFR2, which prevented autophagy-mediated lysosomal VEGFR2 degradation by inhibiting autophagic cargo/adapter p62/SQSTM1 binding to ubiquitinated VEGFR2. Enhanced autophagy flux due to ATP7A dysfunction in vivo was confirmed by autophagy reporter CAG-ATP7Amut -RFP-EGFP-LC3 transgenic mice. In summary, our study uncovers a novel function of ATP7A to limit autophagy-mediated degradation of VEGFR2, thereby promoting VEGFR2 signaling and angiogenesis, which restores perfusion recovery and neovascularization. Thus, endothelial ATP7A is identified as a potential therapeutic target for treatment of ischemic cardiovascular diseases. The role of endothelial copper transporter ATP7A in vascular function and angiogenesis remains largely unexplored. Here the authors show that ATP7A promotes VEGFR2 signaling and angiogenesis by limiting autophagy-mediated degradation of VEGFR2, which enhances reparative neovascularization.

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