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"Receptor, TIE-2 - metabolism"
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Caspase-8 is the molecular switch for apoptosis, necroptosis and pyroptosis
2019
Caspase-8 is the initiator caspase of extrinsic apoptosis
1
,
2
and inhibits necroptosis mediated by RIPK3 and MLKL. Accordingly, caspase-8 deficiency in mice causes embryonic lethality
3
, which can be rescued by deletion of either
Ripk3
or
Mlkl
4
–
6
. Here we show that the expression of enzymatically inactive CASP8(C362S) causes embryonic lethality in mice by inducing necroptosis and pyroptosis. Similar to
Casp8
−/−
mice
3
,
7
,
Casp8
C362S/C362S
mouse embryos died after endothelial cell necroptosis leading to cardiovascular defects. MLKL deficiency rescued the cardiovascular phenotype but unexpectedly caused perinatal lethality in
Casp8
C362S/C362S
mice, indicating that CASP8(C362S) causes necroptosis-independent death at later stages of embryonic development. Specific loss of the catalytic activity of caspase-8 in intestinal epithelial cells induced intestinal inflammation similar to intestinal epithelial cell-specific
Casp8
knockout mice
8
. Inhibition of necroptosis by additional deletion of
Mlkl
severely aggravated intestinal inflammation and caused premature lethality in
Mlkl
knockout mice with specific loss of caspase-8 catalytic activity in intestinal epithelial cells. Expression of CASP8(C362S) triggered the formation of ASC specks, activation of caspase-1 and secretion of IL-1β. Both embryonic lethality and premature death were completely rescued in
Casp8
C362S/C362S
Mlkl
−/−
Asc
−/−
or
Casp8
C362S/C362S
Mlkl
−/−
Casp1
−/−
mice, indicating that the activation of the inflammasome promotes CASP8(C362S)-mediated tissue pathology when necroptosis is blocked. Therefore, caspase-8 represents the molecular switch that controls apoptosis, necroptosis and pyroptosis, and prevents tissue damage during embryonic development and adulthood.
The enzymatic activity of caspase-8 controls apoptosis, necroptosis and pyroptosis, and prevents tissue damage during embryonic development and adulthood in mice.
Journal Article
Cardiac lymphatics are heterogeneous in origin and respond to injury
2015
The lymphatic vasculature is a blind-ended network crucial for tissue-fluid homeostasis, immune surveillance and lipid absorption from the gut. Recent evidence has proposed an entirely venous-derived mammalian lymphatic system. By contrast, here we show that cardiac lymphatic vessels in mice have a heterogeneous cellular origin, whereby formation of at least part of the cardiac lymphatic network is independent of sprouting from veins. Multiple Cre–
lox
-based lineage tracing revealed a potential contribution from the putative haemogenic endothelium during development, and discrete lymphatic endothelial progenitor populations were confirmed by conditional knockout of
Prox1
in Tie2
+
and Vav1
+
compartments. In the adult heart, myocardial infarction promoted a significant lymphangiogenic response, which was augmented by treatment with VEGF-C, resulting in improved cardiac function. These data prompt the re-evaluation of a century-long debate on the origin of lymphatic vessels and suggest that lymphangiogenesis may represent a therapeutic target to promote cardiac repair following injury.
The lymphatic system is thought to be derived by transdifferentiation of venous endothelium; this study shows that the origin of cardiac lymphatics is in fact more heterogeneous, including both venous and non-venous origins and that lymphangiogenesis occurs in the adult heart following myocardial infarction and can be enhanced to improve heart function.
Embryonic origins of lymphatic vessels
The lymphatic endothelium wass thought to arise entirely from transdifferentiation of the venous endothelium. Two studies published in this issue of
Nature
demonstrate that the origins of this vasculature are more varied than anticipated. Karina Yaniv and colleagues use live imaging of transgenic zebrafish embryos to trace the lineage of individual lymphatic endothelial cells and their progeny. They find that lymphatic progenitors emerge from a previously uncharacterized pool of multipotent angioblasts located in the floor of the cardinal vein, which bears the potential to generate not only lymphatic, but also arterial and venous fates. Paul Riley and colleagues used genetic fate-mapping techniques in mice to demonstrate a dual origin of cardiac lymphatic endothelial cells, involving both venous endothelium and a separate non-venous progenitor source arising from yolk sac cells. They also show that the lymphangiogenesis in the heart can be influenced by myocardial infarction, and they suggest that promoting lymphangiogenesis with VEGF-C improves cardiac function after infarction
Journal Article
TIE2 activation by antibody-clustered endogenous angiopoietin-2 prevents capillary loss and fibrosis in experimental kidney disease
by
Quaggin, Susan E.
,
Marks-Hultström, Amanda
,
Betsholtz, Christer
in
Angiopoietin-2 - genetics
,
Angiopoietin-2 - immunology
,
Angiopoietin-2 - metabolism
2025
The role of endothelial dysfunction in tubulointerstitial fibrosis associated with chronic kidney disease (CKD) is not well understood. In this study, we demonstrate that the activation of the endothelial tyrosine kinase TIE2 alleviates renal pathology in experimental CKD in mice. TIE2 activation was achieved using a human angiopoietin-2-binding and TIE2-activating antibody (ABTAA) or through adult-induced endothelium-specific knockout of the vascular endothelial protein tyrosine phosphatase gene (Veptp). Both methods markedly protected CKD mice from endothelial dysfunction, peritubular capillary loss, tubular epithelial injury, and tubulointerstitial fibrosis. Conversely, silencing TIE2 through adult-induced endothelium-specific knockout of the Tie2 gene exacerbated CKD pathology. Additionally, we found that endothelial dysfunction promoted renal fibrosis not through endothelial-to-mesenchymal transition, as previously expected, but by inducing the expression of profibrotic PDGFB in tubular epithelial cells, a process that is inhibited by TIE2 activation. Our findings suggest that TIE2 activation via ABTAA warrants investigation as a therapy in human CKD, where there is a substantial unmet medical need.
Journal Article
Endothelial destabilization by angiopoietin-2 via integrin β1 activation
2015
Angiopoietins regulate vascular homeostasis via the endothelial Tie receptor tyrosine kinases. Angiopoietin-1 (Ang1) supports endothelial stabilization via Tie2 activation. Angiopoietin-2 (Ang2) functions as a context-dependent Tie2 agonist/antagonist promoting pathological angiogenesis, vascular permeability and inflammation. Elucidating Ang2-dependent mechanisms of vascular destablization is critical for rational design of angiopoietin antagonists that have demonstrated therapeutic efficacy in cancer trials. Here, we report that Ang2, but not Ang1, activates β1-integrin, leading to endothelial destablization. Autocrine Ang2 signalling upon Tie2 silencing, or in Ang2 transgenic mice, promotes β1-integrin-positive elongated matrix adhesions and actin stress fibres, regulating vascular endothelial-cadherin-containing cell–cell junctions. The Tie2-silenced monolayer integrity is rescued by β1-integrin, phosphoinositide-3 kinase or Rho kinase inhibition, and by re-expression of a membrane-bound Tie2 ectodomain. Furthermore, Tie2 silencing increases, whereas Ang2 blocking inhibits transendothelial tumour cell migration
in vitro
. These results establish Ang2-mediated β1-integrin activation as a promoter of endothelial destablization, explaining the controversial vascular functions of Ang1 and Ang2.
Angiopoietin-1 (Ang1) and angiopoietin-2 (Ang2) have opposing effects on vascular stability through their receptor Tie2, but there is evidence for Tie2-independent functions of Ang2. Here, Hakanpaa
et al.
show that Ang2 directly activates β1-integrin, leading to rearrangement of the actin cytoskeleton and decreased VE-cadherin in cell–cell junctions.
Journal Article
Tissue-resident macrophages originate from yolk-sac-derived erythro-myeloid progenitors
by
de Bruijn, Marella F.
,
Schulz, Christian
,
Trouillet, Celine
in
13/31
,
14/63
,
631/136/232/2059
2015
To determine the origin of adult tissue-resident macrophages, a mouse lineage tracing study has revealed that these cells derive from erythro-myeloid progenitors in the yolk sac that are distinct from fetal and adult haematopoietic stem cells.
The origin of adult myeloid cells
The developmental origin of tissue-resident macrophage progenitors and their contribution to macrophages in fetal and adult organs relative to bone marrow macrophages are still unclear. Using lineage tracing, Elisa Gomez Perdiguero
et al
. identify a population of yolk-sac-derived progenitors — distinct from fetal and adult haematopoetic stem cells — that gives rise to erythrocytes, macrophages, granulocytes and monocytes in the young mouse fetus, and to the vast majority of adult tissue-resident macrophages.
Most haematopoietic cells renew from adult haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs)
1
,
2
,
3
, however, macrophages in adult tissues can self-maintain independently of HSCs
4
,
5
,
6
,
7
. Progenitors with macrophage potential
in vitro
have been described in the yolk sac before emergence of HSCs
8
,
9
,
10
,
11
,
12
,
13
, and fetal macrophages
13
,
14
,
15
can develop independently of
Myb
4
, a transcription factor required for HSC
16
, and can persist in adult tissues
4
,
17
,
18
. Nevertheless, the origin of adult macrophages and the qualitative and quantitative contributions of HSC and putative non-HSC-derived progenitors are still unclear
19
. Here we show in mice that the vast majority of adult tissue-resident macrophages in liver (Kupffer cells), brain (microglia), epidermis (Langerhans cells) and lung (alveolar macrophages) originate from a
Tie2
+
(also known as
Tek
) cellular pathway generating
Csf1r
+
erythro-myeloid progenitors (EMPs) distinct from HSCs. EMPs develop in the yolk sac at embryonic day (E) 8.5, migrate and colonize the nascent fetal liver before E10.5, and give rise to fetal erythrocytes, macrophages, granulocytes and monocytes until at least E16.5. Subsequently, HSC-derived cells replace erythrocytes, granulocytes and monocytes. Kupffer cells, microglia and Langerhans cells are only marginally replaced in one-year-old mice, whereas alveolar macrophages may be progressively replaced in ageing mice. Our fate-mapping experiments identify, in the fetal liver, a sequence of yolk sac EMP-derived and HSC-derived haematopoiesis, and identify yolk sac EMPs as a common origin for tissue macrophages.
Journal Article
Exosomal lncRNA-H19 promotes osteogenesis and angiogenesis through mediating Angpt1/Tie2-NO signaling in CBS-heterozygous mice
by
Kumar, Anil
,
Voor, Michael J.
,
Behera, Jyotirmaya
in
Angiogenesis
,
Angiopoietin-1 - genetics
,
Angiopoietin-1 - metabolism
2021
Emerging evidence indicates that the growth of blood vessels and osteogenesis is tightly coordinated during bone development. However, the molecular regulators of intercellular communication in the bone microenvironment are not well studied. Therefore, we aim to investigate whether BMMSC-Exo promotes osteogenesis and angiogenesis via transporting lnc-H19 in the CBS- heterozygous mouse model.
Using RT2 lncRNA PCR array screening, we identify a bone-specific, long noncoding RNA-H19 (lncRNA-H19/lnc-H19) in exosomes derived from bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells (BMMSC-Exo) during osteogenesis. Using bioinformatics analysis, we further discovered the seed sequence of miR-106a that could bind to lnc-H19. A luciferase reporter assay was performed to demonstrate the direct binding of miR-106a to the target gene angiopoietin 1 (Angpt1). We employed an immunocompromised Nude mouse model, to evaluate the effects of BMMSC-Exo on angiogenesis
. Using a micro-CT scan, we monitored microstructural changes of bone in the experimental mice.
BMMSC-Exo possessed exosomal characteristics including exosome size, and typical markers including CD63, CD9, and TSD101.
, BMMSC-Exo significantly promoted endothelial angiogenesis and osteogenesis. Mechanistic studies have shown that exosomal lnc-H19 acts as \"sponges\" to absorb miR-106 and regulate the expression of angiogenic factor, Angpt1 that activates lnc-H19/Tie2-NO signaling in mesenchymal and endothelial cells. Both of these effects on osteogenesis and angiogenesis are inhibited by antagonizing Tie2 signaling. Treatment of BMMSC-Exo also restored the bone formation and mechanical quality
.
These findings provide a novel insight into how the extracellular role of exosomal lnc-H19 affects osteogenesis and angiogenesis through competing endogenous RNA networks.
Journal Article
Cathepsin K cleavage of angiopoietin-2 creates detrimental Tie2 antagonist fragments in sepsis
2025
Elevated angiopoietin-2 is associated with diverse inflammatory conditions, including sepsis, a leading global cause of mortality. During inflammation, angiopoietin-2 antagonizes the endothelium-enriched receptor Tie2 to destabilize the vasculature. In other contexts, angiopoietin-2 stimulates Tie2. The basis for context-dependent antagonism remains incompletely understood. Here, we show that inflammation-induced proteolytic cleavage of angiopoietin-2 converts this ligand from Tie2 agonist to antagonist. Conditioned media from stimulated macrophages induced endothelial angiopoietin-2 secretion. Unexpectedly, this was associated with reduction of the 75 kDa full-length protein and appearance of new 25 and 50 kDa C-terminal fragments. Peptide sequencing proposed cathepsin K as a candidate protease. Cathepsin K was necessary and sufficient to cleave angiopoietin-2. Recombinant 25 and 50 kDa angiopoietin-2 fragments (cANGPT225 and cANGPT250) bound and antagonized Tie2. Cathepsin K inhibition with the phase 3 small-molecule inhibitor odanacatib improved survival in distinct murine sepsis models. Full-length angiopoietin-2 enhanced survival in endotoxemic mice administered odanacatib and, conversely, increased mortality in the drug's absence. Odanacatib's benefit was reversed by heterologous cANGPT225. Septic humans accumulated circulating angiopoietin-2 fragments, which were associated with adverse outcomes. These results identify cathepsin K as a candidate marker of sepsis and a proteolytic mechanism for the conversion of angiopoietin-2 from Tie2 agonist to antagonist, with therapeutic implications for inflammatory conditions associated with angiopoietin-2 induction.
Journal Article
Rapamycin improves TIE2-mutated venous malformation in murine model and human subjects
2015
Venous malformations (VMs) are composed of ectatic veins with scarce smooth muscle cell coverage. Activating mutations in the endothelial cell tyrosine kinase receptor TIE2 are a common cause of these lesions. VMs cause deformity, pain, and local intravascular coagulopathy, and they expand with time. Targeted pharmacological therapies are not available for this condition. Here, we generated a model of VMs by injecting HUVECs expressing the most frequent VM-causing TIE2 mutation, TIE2-L914F, into immune-deficient mice. TIE2-L914F-expressing HUVECs formed VMs with ectatic blood-filled channels that enlarged over time. We tested both rapamycin and a TIE2 tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TIE2-TKI) for their effects on murine VM expansion and for their ability to inhibit mutant TIE2 signaling. Rapamycin prevented VM growth, while TIE2-TKI had no effect. In cultured TIE2-L914F-expressing HUVECs, rapamycin effectively reduced mutant TIE2-induced AKT signaling and, though TIE2-TKI did target the WT receptor, it only weakly suppressed mutant-induced AKT signaling. In a prospective clinical pilot study, we analyzed the effects of rapamycin in 6 patients with difficult-to-treat venous anomalies. Rapamycin reduced pain, bleeding, lesion size, functional and esthetic impairment, and intravascular coagulopathy. This study provides a VM model that allows evaluation of potential therapeutic strategies and demonstrates that rapamycin provides clinical improvement in patients with venous malformation.
Journal Article
Angiopoietin/Tie2 signalling and its role in retinal and choroidal vascular diseases: a review of preclinical data
by
Ricci, Federico
,
Korn, Claudia
,
Quezada-Ruiz, Carlos
in
Angiogenesis
,
Angiopoietin
,
Blood vessels
2021
The angopoietin/tyrosine kinase with immunoglobulin and epidermal growth factor homology domains (Ang/Tie) pathway is an emerging key regulator in vascular development and maintenance. Its relevance to clinicians and basic scientists as a potential therapeutic target in retinal and choroidal vascular diseases is highlighted by recent preclinical and clinical evidence. The Ang/Tie pathway plays an important role in the regulation of vascular stability, in angiogenesis under physiological and pathological conditions, as well as in inflammation. Under physiological conditions, angiopoietin-1 (Ang-1) binds to and phosphorylates the Tie2 receptor, leading to downstream signalling that promotes cell survival and vascular stability. Angiopoietin-2 (Ang-2) is upregulated under pathological conditions and acts as a context-dependent agonist/antagonist of the Ang-1/Tie2 axis, causing vascular destabilisation and sensitising blood vessels to the effects of vascular endothelial growth factor-A (VEGF-A). Ang-2 and VEGF-A synergistically drive vascular leakage, neovascularisation and inflammation, key components of retinal vascular diseases. Preclinical evidence suggests that modulating the Ang/Tie pathway restores vascular stabilisation and reduces inflammation. This review discusses how targeting the Ang/Tie pathway or applying Ang-2/VEGF-A combination therapy may be a valuable therapeutic strategy for restoring vascular stability and reducing inflammation in the treatment of retinal and choroidal vascular diseases.
Journal Article
Pericyte-expressed Tie2 controls angiogenesis and vessel maturation
2017
The Tie receptors with their Angiopoietin ligands act as regulators of angiogenesis and vessel maturation. Tie2 exerts its functions through its supposed endothelial-specific expression. Yet, Tie2 is also expressed at lower levels by pericytes and it has not been unravelled through which mechanisms pericyte Angiopoietin/Tie signalling affects angiogenesis. Here we show that human and murine pericytes express functional Tie2 receptor. Silencing of Tie2 in pericytes results in a pro-migratory phenotype. Pericyte Tie2 controls sprouting angiogenesis in
in vitro
sprouting and
in vivo
spheroid assays. Tie2 downstream signalling in pericytes involves Calpain, Akt and FOXO3A.
Ng2-Cre
-driven deletion of pericyte-expressed Tie2 in mice transiently delays postnatal retinal angiogenesis. Yet, Tie2 deletion in pericytes results in a pronounced pro-angiogenic effect leading to enhanced tumour growth. Together, the data expand and revise the current concepts on vascular Angiopoietin/Tie signalling and propose a bidirectional, reciprocal EC-pericyte model of Tie2 signalling.
The angiopoietins regulate vascular maturation, angiogenesis and lymphangiogenesis via their Tie receptors that were long believed to be endothelium-specific. Here the authors show that angiopoietins activate and control pericyte function through pericyte-expressed Tie2 triggering of Calpain, Akt and FOXO3A signalling cascades.
Journal Article