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Redox regulation of ischemic limb neovascularization - What we have learned from animal studies

Journal

REDOX BIOLOGY
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages 1011-1019

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.redox.2017.04.040

Keywords

Ischemic limb; Angiogenesis; Oxidants; GSH adducts; Glutaredoxin

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01 HL133013, R03 AG051857]
  2. NIH CTSI award [1UL1TR001430]
  3. Banyu Foundation Research Grant
  4. Marie-Curie International Incoming Fellowship [IVSCP 626633]
  5. Diabetes UK [16/005453]

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Mouse hindlimb ischemia has been widely used as a model to study peripheral artery disease. Genetic modulation of the enzymatic source of oxidants or components of the antioxidant system reveal that physiological levels of oxidants are essential to promote the process of arteriogenesis and angiogenesis after femoral artery occlusion, although mice with diabetes or atherosclerosis may have higher deleterious levels of oxidants. Therefore, fine control of oxidants is required to stimulate vascularization in the limb muscle. Oxidants transduce cellular signaling through oxidative modifications of redox sensitive cysteine thiols. Of particular importance, the reversible modification with abundant glutathione, called S-glutathionylation (or GSH adducts), is relatively stable and alters protein function including signaling, transcription, and cytoskeletal arrangement. Glutaredoxin-1 (Glrx) is an enzyme which catalyzes reversal of GSH adducts, and does not scavenge oxidants itself. Glrx may control redox signaling under fluctuation of oxidants levels. In ischemic muscle increased GSH adducts through Glrx deletion improves in vivo limb revascularization, indicating endogenous Glrx has anti-angiogenic roles. In accordance, Glrx overexpression attenuates VEGF signaling in vitro and ischemic vascularization in vivo. There are several Glrx targets including HIF-1 alpha which may contribute to inhibition of vascularization by reducing GSH adducts. These animal studies provide a caution that excess antioxidants may be counter-productive for treatment of ischemic limbs, and highlights Glrx as a potential therapeutic target to improve ischemic limb vascularization.

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