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Endothelial Palmitoylation Cycling Coordinates Vessel Remodeling in Peripheral Artery Disease.

Citation
Wei, X., et al. “Endothelial Palmitoylation Cycling Coordinates Vessel Remodeling In Peripheral Artery Disease.”. Circulation Research, pp. 249-265.
Center Washington University in St Louis
Author Xiaochao Wei, Sangeeta Adak, Mohamed Zayed, Li Yin, Chu Feng, Sarah L Speck, Rahul S Kathayat, Qiang Zhang, Bryan C Dickinson, Clay F Semenkovich
Keywords Acetylation, diabetes mellitus, hyperglycemia, metabolic syndrome, peripheral artery disease
Abstract

RATIONALE: Peripheral artery disease, common in metabolic syndrome and diabetes mellitus, responds poorly to medical interventions and is characterized by chronic vessel immaturity leading to lower extremity amputations.

OBJECTIVE: To define the role of reversible palmitoylation at the endothelium in the maintenance of vascular maturity.

METHODS AND RESULTS: Endothelial knockout of the depalmitoylation enzyme APT-1 (acyl-protein thioesterase 1) in mice impaired recovery from chronic hindlimb ischemia, a model of peripheral artery disease. Endothelial APT-1 deficiency decreased fibronectin processing, disrupted adherens junctions, and inhibited in vitro lumen formation. In an unbiased palmitoylation proteomic screen of endothelial cells from genetically modified mice, R-Ras, known to promote vessel maturation, was preferentially affected by APT-1 deficiency. R-Ras was validated as an APT-1 substrate, and click chemistry analyses demonstrated increased R-Ras palmitoylation in cells with APT-1 deficiency. APT-1 enzyme activity was decreased in endothelial cells from mice. Hyperglycemia decreased APT-1 activity in human umbilical vein endothelial cells, due, in part, to altered acetylation of the APT-1 protein. Click chemistry analyses demonstrated increased R-Ras palmitoylation in the setting of hyperglycemia. Altered R-Ras trafficking, increased R-Ras palmitoylation, and fibronectin retention were found in diabetes mellitus models. Loss of R-Ras depalmitoylation caused by APT-1 deficiency constrained R-Ras membrane trafficking, as shown by total internal reflection fluorescence imaging. To rescue cellular phenotypes, we generated an R-Ras molecule with an inserted hydrophilic domain to circumvent membrane rigidity caused by defective palmitoylation turnover. This modification corrected R-Ras membrane trafficking, restored fibronectin processing, increased adherens junctions, and rescued defective lumen formation induced by APT-1 deficiency.

CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest that endothelial depalmitoylation is regulated by the metabolic milieu and controls plasma membrane partitioning to maintain vascular homeostasis.

Year of Publication
2020
Journal
Circulation research
Volume
127
Issue
2
Number of Pages
249-265
Date Published
07/2020
ISSN Number
1524-4571
DOI
10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.120.316752
Alternate Journal
Circ. Res.
PMID
32233916
PMCID
PMC7334103
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