Electronegative LDL impairs vascular endothelial cell integrity in diabetes by disrupting FGF2 autoregulation
- Jonathan Lu1,
- Wei Jiang1,,2,
- Jun-Hai Yang1,
- Po-Yuan Chang3,
- Jeffrey P. Walterscheid1,
- Hsin-Hung Chen1,
- Marco Marcelli1,
- Daming Tang1,
- Yuan-Teh Lee3,
- Warren S.L. Liao4,
- Chao-Yuh Yang1 and
- Chu-Huang Chen (cchen{at}bcm.tmc.edu)1
- From the 1Departments of Medicine, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas;
- the 2Department of Cancer Prevention and Lymphoma/Myeloma, The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas;
- the 3Department of Internal Medicine, National Taiwan University Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan; and
- the 4Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas
Abstract
Objective: L5, a circulating electronegative LDL identified in patients with hypercholesterolemia or type 2 diabetes, induces endothelial cell (EC) apoptosis by suppressing FGF2 expression. FGF2 plays a pivotal role in endothelial regeneration and compensatory arteriogenesis. It is likely that vasculopathy and poor collateralization in diabetes is a result of FGF2 dysregulation.
Research Design and Methods: To investigate this mechanism, we isolated L5 from type 2 diabetic patients. In cultured bovine aortic ECs (BAECs), L5 inhibited FGF2 transcription and induced apoptosis. Because FGF2 stimulates the PI3K-Akt pathway, we examined whether FGF2 transcription is regulated by Akt through a feedback mechanism.
Results: Diabetic L5 reduced FGF2 release to the medium but enhanced caspase 3 activity, with resultant apoptosis. Inhibition of PI3K with wortmannin, or suppression of Akt activation with dominant-negative Akt inhibited FGF2 expression. Transfection of BAECs with FGF2 antisense cDNA depleted endogenous FGF2 protein. In these cells, not only was Akt phosphorylation inhibited, but FGF2 transcription was also critically impaired. In contrast, transfecting BAECs with FGF2 sense cDNA augmented Akt phosphorylation. Treatment with constitutively active Akt enhanced FGF2 expression. Augmentation of either FGF2 transcription or Akt phosphorylation rendered BAECs resistant to L5.
Conclusions: These findings suggest that FGF2 is the primary initiator of its own expression, which is autoregulated through a novel FGF2-PI3K-Akt loop. Thus, by disrupting FGF2 autoregulation in vascular ECs, L5 may impair reendothelialization and collateralization in diabetes.
Footnotes
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- Received September 10, 2007.
- Accepted October 17, 2007.
- Copyright © American Diabetes Association











