作者
Ting Wen,Yanyan Duan,Dan Gao,Xinxin Zhang,Xiaoyan Zhang,Liang Liang,Ziyan Yang,Peiran Zhang,Jiayulin Zhang,Jiaxing Sun,Yixuan Feng,Qijun Zheng,Hua Han,Xianchun Yan
摘要
Under various pathological conditions such as cancer, vascular smooth muscle cells (vSMCs) transit their contractile phenotype into phenotype(s) characterized by proliferation and secretion, a process called vSMC phenotypic transition (vSMC-PT). Notch signaling regulates vSMC development and vSMC-PT. This study aims to elucidate how the Notch signal is regulated.Gene-modified mice with a SM22α-CreERT2 transgene were generated to activate/block Notch signaling in vSMCs. Primary vSMCs and MOVAS cells were cultured in vitro. RNA-seq, qRT-PCR and Western blotting were used to evaluated gene expression level. EdU incorporation, Transwell and collagen gel contraction assays were conducted to determine the proliferation, migration and contraction, respectively.Notch activation upregulated, while Notch blockade downregulated, miR-342-5p and its host gene Evl in vSMCs. However, miR-342-5p overexpression promoted vSMC-PT as shown by altered gene expression profile, increased migration and proliferation, and decreased contraction, while miR-342-5p blockade exhibited the opposite effects. Moreover, miR-342-5p overexpression significantly suppressed Notch signaling, and Notch activation partially abolished miR-342-5p-induced vSMC-PT. Mechanically, miR-342-5p directly targeted FOXO3, and FOXO3 overexpression rescued miR-342-5p-induced Notch repression and vSMC-PT. In a simulated tumor microenvironment, miR-342-5p was upregulated by tumor cell-derived conditional medium (TCM), and miR-342-5p blockade abrogated TCM-induced vSMC-PT. Meanwhile, conditional medium from miR-342-5p-overexpressing vSMCs significantly enhanced tumor cell proliferation, while miR-342-5p blockade had the opposite effects. Consistently, in a co-inoculation tumor model, miR-342-5p blockade in vSMCs significantly delayed tumor growth.miR-342-5p promotes vSMC-PT through a negative-feedback regulation of Notch signaling via downregulating FOXO3, which could be a potential target for cancer therapy.