4.7 Article

MKL1 fuels ROS-induced proliferation of vascular smooth muscle cells by modulating FOXM1 transcription

Journal

REDOX BIOLOGY
Volume 59, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.redox.2022.102586

Keywords

Transcriptional regulation; Post -translational modification; Vascular injury; Vascular smooth muscle cell; Proliferation; Phenotypic modulation

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ROS promotes vascular smooth muscle proliferation by activating the MK-2/MKL1/FOXM1 axis, which leads to vascular injury and neointima formation. Targeting the MK-2/MKL1/FOXM1 axis may be a promising approach for the treatment of restenosis.
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) promotes vascular injury and neointima formation in part by stimulating proliferation of vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMC). The underlying transcriptional mechanism, however, is not completely understood. Here we report that VSMC-specific deletion of MKL1 in mice suppressed neointima formation in a classic model of vascular injury. Likewise, pharmaceutical inhibition of MKL1 activity by CCG1423 similarly mollified neointima formation in mice. Over-expression of a constitutively active MKL1 in vascular smooth muscle cells enhanced proliferation in a ROS-dependent manner. On the contrary, MKL1 depletion or inhibition attenuated VSMC proliferation. PCR array based screening identified forkhead box protein M1 (FOXM1) as a direct target for MKL1. MKL1 interacted with E2F1 to activate FOXM1 expression. Concordantly, FOXM1 depletion ameliorated MKL1-dependent VSMC proliferation. Of interest, ROS-induced MKL1 phosphorylation through MK2 was essential for its interaction with E2F1 and consequently FOXM1 trans-activation. Importantly, a positive correlation between FOXM1 expression and VSMC proliferation was identified in arterial specimens from patients with restenosis. Taken together, our data suggest that a redoxsensitive phosphorylation-switch of MKL1 activates FOXM1 transcription and mediates ROS fueled vascular smooth muscle proliferation. Targeting the MK-2/MKL1/FOXM1 axis may be considered as a reasonable approach for treatment of restenosis.

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