Endothelial transcriptomic, epigenomic and proteomic data challenge the proposed role for TSAd in vascular permeability

IF 9.2 1区 医学 Q1 PERIPHERAL VASCULAR DISEASE Angiogenesis Pub Date : 2025-03-13 DOI:10.1007/s10456-025-09971-x
James T. Brash, Guillermo Diez-Pinel, Luca Rinaldi, Raphael F. P. Castellan, Alessandro Fantin, Christiana Ruhrberg
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The vascular endothelial growth factor VEGF drives excessive vascular permeability to cause tissue-damaging oedema in neovascular and inflammatory diseases across multiple organs. Several molecular pathways have been implicated in VEGF-induced hyperpermeability, including binding of the VEGF-activated tyrosine kinase receptor VEGFR2 by the T-cell specific adaptor (TSAd) to recruit a SRC family kinase to induce junction opening between vascular endothelial cells (ECs). Inconsistent with a universal role for TSAd in permeability signalling, immunostaining approaches previously reported TSAd only in dermal and kidney vasculature. To address this discrepancy, we have mined publicly available omics data for expression of TSAd and other permeability-relevant signal transducers in multiple organs affected by VEGF-induced vascular permeability. Unexpectedly, TSAd transcripts were largely absent from EC single cell RNAseq data, whereas transcripts for other permeability-relevant signal transducers were detected readily. TSAd transcripts were also lacking from half of the EC bulk RNAseq datasets examined, and in the remaining datasets appeared at low levels concordant with models of leaky transcription. Epigenomic EC data located the TSAd promoter to closed chromatin in ECs, and mass spectrometry-derived EC proteomes typically lacked TSAd. By suggesting that TSAd is not actively expressed in ECs, our findings imply that TSAd is likely not critical for linking VEGFR2 to downstream signal transducers for EC junction opening.

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来源期刊
Angiogenesis
Angiogenesis PERIPHERAL VASCULAR DISEASE-
CiteScore
21.90
自引率
8.20%
发文量
37
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Angiogenesis, a renowned international journal, seeks to publish high-quality original articles and reviews on the cellular and molecular mechanisms governing angiogenesis in both normal and pathological conditions. By serving as a primary platform for swift communication within the field of angiogenesis research, this multidisciplinary journal showcases pioneering experimental studies utilizing molecular techniques, in vitro methods, animal models, and clinical investigations into angiogenic diseases. Furthermore, Angiogenesis sheds light on cutting-edge therapeutic strategies for promoting or inhibiting angiogenesis, while also highlighting fresh markers and techniques for disease diagnosis and prognosis.
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