4.8 Article

Targeting mechanosensitive endothelial TXNDC5 to stabilize eNOS and reduce atherosclerosis in vivo

Journal

SCIENCE ADVANCES
Volume 8, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.abl8096

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Taiwan Ministry of Science Technology [108-2314-B-002-199-MY3, 109-2628-B-002-032]
  2. Innovative Research Grant from Taiwan National Health Research Institute [NHRI-EX109-10936SI]
  3. CRC Translational Research [IBMS-CRC108-P03]
  4. Institute of Biomedical Sciences at Academia Sinica, Taiwan [AS-TM-109-01-04]
  5. National Taiwan University Hospital [NTUH.107-T02, UN107-019, 107-N4062, VN107-03, 108-T16, VN108-06, VN109-07, VN110-01, NTUH.108-P04, 108-N4198, 108-S4247, 108-EDN03, 109-EDN05, 109-S4576, 110-S4836, 110-T16]
  6. National Taiwan University College of Medicine [NSCCMOH-131-41, 109C101-41, 110C101-071]
  7. National Taiwan University [109L7872]
  8. Chicago Biomedical Consortium [A-014]
  9. American Heart Association [20TPA35490401]
  10. National Institutes of Health/NIH [R01HL138223, R01HL136765, R01HL119798, R01HL139757]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study provides experimental evidence of the role of flow-induced endothelial TXNDC5 in atherosclerosis development. It shows that TXNDC5 is increased in atherosclerotic lesions and induced in endothelium subjected to disturbed flow. The study also demonstrates that targeting TXNDC5 can reduce degradation of heat shock protein 90 and increase eNOS protein expression, leading to reduced atherosclerosis.
Although atherosclerosis preferentially develops at arterial curvatures and bifurcations where disturbed flow (DF) activates endothelium, therapies targeting flow-dependent mechanosensing pathways in the vasculature are unavailable. Here, we provided experimental evidence demonstrating a previously unidentified causal role of DF-induced endothelial TXNDC5 (thioredoxin domain containing 5) in atherosclerosis. TXNDC5 was increased in human and mouse atherosclerotic lesions and induced in endothelium subjected to DF. Endothelium-specific Txndc5 deletion markedly reduced atherosclerosis in ApoE(-/-) mice. Mechanistically, DF-induced TXNDC5 increases proteasome-mediated degradation of heat shock factor 1, leading to reduced heat shock protein 90 and accelerated eNOS (endothelial nitric oxide synthase) protein degradation. Moreover, nanoparticles formulated to deliver Txndc5-targeting CRISPR-Cas9 plasmids driven by an endothelium-specific promoter (CDH5) significantly increase eNOS protein and reduce atherosclerosis in ApoE(-/-) mice. These results delineate a new molecular paradigm that DF-induced endothelial TXNDC5 promotes atherosclerosis and establish a proof of concept of targeting endothelial mechanosensitive pathways in vivo against atherosclerosis.

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