4.5 Article

Pericyte Insulin Receptors Modulate Retinal Vascular Remodeling and Endothelial Angiopoietin Signaling

Journal

ENDOCRINOLOGY
Volume 162, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

ENDOCRINE SOC
DOI: 10.1210/endocr/bqab182

Keywords

Pericyte; endothelial; angiogenesis; venous; insulin; angiopoietin

Funding

  1. University of Leeds Alumnus Footsteps Fund
  2. British Heart Foundation Clinical Research Training Fellowship [FS/11/91/29090]
  3. British Heart Foundation Intermediate Clinical Fellowship [FS/12/80/29821]

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In this study, pericyte insulin signaling was found to promote angiopoietin-1 secretion and endothelial Tie2 signaling. Disruption of this pathway led to excessive vascular sprouting and venous plexus abnormalities, mimicking diabetic retinopathy characteristics. Future research should focus on evaluating the role of pericyte insulin signaling in this disease.
Pericytes regulate vascular development, stability, and quiescence; their dysfunction contributes to diabetic retinopathy. To explore the role of insulin receptors in pericyte biology, we created pericyte insulin receptor knockout mice (PIRKO) by crossing PDGFR beta-Cre mice with insulin receptor (Insr) floxed mice. Their neonatal retinal vasculature exhibited perivenous hypervascularity with venular dilatation, plus increased angiogenic sprouting in superficial and deep layers. Pericyte coverage of capillaries was unaltered in perivenous and periarterial plexi, and no differences in vascular regression or endothelial proliferation were apparent. Isolated brain pericytes from PIRKO had decreased angiopoietin-1 mRNA, whereas retinal and lung angiopoietin-2 mRNA was increased. Endothelial phospho-Tie2 staining was diminished and FoxO1 was more frequently nuclear localized in the perivenous plexus of PIRKO, in keeping with reduced angiopoietin-Tie2 signaling. Silencing of Insr in human brain pericytes led to reduced insulin-stimulated angiopoietin-1 secretion, and conditioned media from these cells was less able to induce Tie2 phosphorylation in human endothelial cells. Hence, insulin signaling in pericytes promotes angiopoietin-1 secretion and endothelial Tie2 signaling and perturbation of this leads to excessive vascular sprouting and venous plexus abnormalities. This phenotype mimics elements of diabetic retinopathy, and future work should evaluate pericyte insulin signaling in this disease.

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