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Site-1 protease–mediated cholesterol metabolism is essential for lymphatic development in mice
Yuji Kondo, Yizhi Jiang, Xin Geng, Jianhua Song, Summer Simeroth, J. Michael McDaniel, Pengchun Yu, R. Sathish Srinivasan, Lijun Xia
Yuji Kondo, Yizhi Jiang, Xin Geng, Jianhua Song, Summer Simeroth, J. Michael McDaniel, Pengchun Yu, R. Sathish Srinivasan, Lijun Xia
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Research Article Metabolism Vascular biology

Site-1 protease–mediated cholesterol metabolism is essential for lymphatic development in mice

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Abstract

Recent evidence suggests that cellular metabolism, including glycolysis and fatty acid synthesis in lymphatic endothelial cells (LECs), plays essential roles in developing functional lymphatic systems. Site-1 protease (S1P) proteolytically activates membrane-bound latent transcription factor sterol regulatory element-binding proteins (SREBPs), which are required to induce lipid biosynthesis. In this study, we generated mice with pan-endothelial or LEC-specific deficiency of either S1P or SREBP2. Mouse embryos with pan-endothelial deletion of S1P showed defective lymphatic vessel migration in skin and lymphedema, while their blood vasculature formation was relatively normal. Mice lacking S1P in LECs or SREBP2 in LECs exhibited chylous ascites, reduced lipogenic gene expression, and reduced VEGFR3 expression and progressively developed wasting, resulting in postnatal death by approximately 8 weeks of age. Additionally, mice with SREBP2 deletion in LECs exhibited dilated lacteal and mesenteric lymphatics and accumulation of lipids in the lacteal before weaning age, indicating apparent lymphatic malfunctioning. These data indicate that S1P-SREBP2–mediated cholesterol biosynthesis is pivotal in lymphatic vascular development. We also found that treating human dermal LECs with VEGF-C induced proteolytic activation of SREBP2 with concomitant phosphorylation of Akt and the expression of genes involved in cholesterol biosynthesis. Those effects were canceled out by treating the cells with an S1P inhibitor or SREBP inhibitor. These data demonstrate that the S1P/SREBP2 axis is critical in VEGF-C/VEGFR3 mitogenic signaling in LECs.

Authors

Yuji Kondo, Yizhi Jiang, Xin Geng, Jianhua Song, Summer Simeroth, J. Michael McDaniel, Pengchun Yu, R. Sathish Srinivasan, Lijun Xia

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Figure 4

Mice with LEC-specific deletion of MBTPS1 or SREBP2 show dilated lacteals.

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Mice with LEC-specific deletion of MBTPS1 or SREBP2 show dilated lacteal...
(A) Representative whole-mount IF images of endothelial cells (green) and lymphatic vessels (red) in sections of jejunum from littermate control and LEC Mbtps1–/– mice (20 days of age). (B) Quantification of the length and width of the lacteal of littermate controls and LEC Mbtps1–/– mice. (C) Whole-mount IF images of VEGFR3 of lacteals of jejunum from WT littermates and LEC Mbtps1–/– or LEC Srebf2–/– mice (20 days of age). Fluorescence intensity of VEGFR3 was quantified using ImageJ and normalized to the average intensity of control lacteals. (D) Representative images of Oil Red O staining of jejunum section of LEC Srebf2–/– mice and littermates (20 days of age). Arrow marks Oil Red O–positive lacteals. N = 3 for control littermates; N = 4 for each mutant genotype respectively. A total of 12 lacteals from each animal were analyzed. Each dot represents 1 animal on the graph. The graphs were plotted as mean ± SD. An unpaired t test was performed for the statistical analysis. *P < 0.05; **P < 0.01.

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