4.7 Article

A mitochondrial contribution to anti-inflammatory shear stress signaling in vascular endothelial cells

期刊

JOURNAL OF CELL BIOLOGY
卷 221, 期 7, 页码 -

出版社

ROCKEFELLER UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1083/jcb.202109144

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资金

  1. American Heart Association [13POST16720007, 17SDG33400173]
  2. National Institutes of Health [R01 HL75092]
  3. Leducq Trans-Atlantic Network Grant
  4. European Research Council [ERC-CoG 647057]
  5. Associazione Italiana Ricerca sul Cancro Investigator Grant [20119]
  6. Canadian Institutes of Health Research
  7. Krembil foundation
  8. Brain Canada foundation

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This study reveals the mechanism by which laminar shear stress (LSS) induces the anti-inflammatory transcription factor Klf2 through regulation of mitochondrial metabolism and kinase module activation. It defines a new framework for understanding and developing treatments for vascular disease by uncovering the connection between metabolism and vascular inflammation.
Atherosclerosis, the major cause of myocardial infarction and stroke, results from converging inflammatory, metabolic, and biomechanical factors. Arterial lesions form at sites of low and disturbed blood flow but are suppressed by high laminar shear stress (LSS) mainly via transcriptional induction of the anti-inflammatory transcription factor, Kruppel-like factor 2 (Klf2). We therefore performed a whole genome CRISPR-Cas9 screen to identify genes required for LSS induction of Klf2. Subsequent mechanistic investigation revealed that LSS induces Klf2 via activation of both a MEKK2/3-MEK5-ERK5 kinase module and mitochondrial metabolism. Mitochondrial calcium and ROS signaling regulate assembly of a mitophagy- and p62-dependent scaffolding complex that amplifies MEKK-MEK5-ERK5 signaling. Blocking the mitochondrial pathway in vivo reduces expression of KLF2-dependent genes such as eNOS and inhibits vascular remodeling. Failure to activate the mitochondrial pathway limits Klf2 expression in regions of disturbed flow. This work thus defines a connection between metabolism and vascular inflammation that provides a new framework for understanding and developing treatments for vascular disease.

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