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Endothelial pyruvate kinase M2 maintains vascular integrity.

Citation
Kim, B., et al. “Endothelial Pyruvate Kinase M2 Maintains Vascular Integrity.”. The Journal Of Clinical Investigation, pp. 4543-4556.
Center University of Pennsylvania
Author Boa Kim, Cholsoon Jang, Harita Dharaneeswaran, Jian Li, Mohit Bhide, Steven Yang, Kristina Li, Zolt Arany
Keywords Metabolism, Vascular Biology, endothelial cells
Abstract

The M2 isoform of pyruvate kinase (PKM2) is highly expressed in most cancer cells, and has been studied extensively as a driver of oncogenic metabolism. In contrast, the role of PKM2 in nontransformed cells is little studied, and nearly nothing is known of its role, if any, in quiescent cells. We show here that endothelial cells express PKM2 almost exclusively over PKM1. In proliferating endothelial cells, PKM2 is required to suppress p53 and maintain cell cycle progression. In sharp contrast, PKM2 has a strikingly different role in quiescent endothelial cells, where inhibition of PKM2 leads to degeneration of tight junctions and barrier function. Mechanistically, PKM2 regulates barrier function independently of its canonical activity as a pyruvate kinase. Instead, PKM2 suppresses NF-kB and its downstream target, the vascular permeability factor angiopoietin 2. As a consequence, loss of endothelial cell PKM2 in vivo predisposes mice to VEGF-induced vascular leak, and to severe bacteremia and death in response to sepsis. Together, these data demonstrate new roles of PKM2 in quiescent cells, and highlight the need for caution in developing cancer therapies that target PKM2.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
The Journal of clinical investigation
Volume
128
Issue
10
Number of Pages
4543-4556
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
1558-8238
DOI
10.1172/JCI120912
Alternate Journal
J. Clin. Invest.
PMID
30222136
PMCID
PMC6159968
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