m 6 A reader IGF2BP1 accelerates apoptosis of high glucose-induced vascular endothelial cells in a m 6 A-HMGB1 dependent manner

Emerging evidence indicates that N -methyladenosine (m A) plays a critical role in vascular biological characteristic. In diabetes mellitus pathophysiology, high glucose (HG)-induced vascular endothelial dysfunction is associated with diabetes vascular complications. Nevertheless, the underlying mec...

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Veröffentlicht in:PeerJ (San Francisco, CA) CA), 2023-03, Vol.11, p.e14954, Article e14954
Hauptverfasser: Liang, Anru, Liu, Jianyu, Wei, Yanlin, Liao, Yuan, Wu, Fangxiao, Ruan, Jiang, Li, Junjun
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Emerging evidence indicates that N -methyladenosine (m A) plays a critical role in vascular biological characteristic. In diabetes mellitus pathophysiology, high glucose (HG)-induced vascular endothelial dysfunction is associated with diabetes vascular complications. Nevertheless, the underlying mechanism of high glucose (HG)-related m A regulation on vascular endothelial cells is still unclear. Results indicated that m A reader insulin-like growth factor 2 mRNA-binding protein 1 (IGF2BP1) was up-regulated in HG-treated human umbilical vascular endothelium cells (HUVECs) comparing to normal group. Functionally, results indicated that IGF2BP1 knockdown recovered the proliferation of HUVECs inhibited by HG-administration. Besides, IGF2BP1 knockdown reduced the apoptosis induced by HG-administration. Mechanistically, IGF2BP1 interacted with HMGB1 mRNA and stabilized its expression of m A-modified RNA. Therefore, these findings provided compelling evidence demonstrating that m A reader IGF2BP1 contributes to the proliferation and apoptosis of vascular endothelial cells in hyperglycaemia, serving as a target for development of diabetic angiopathy therapeutics.
ISSN:2167-8359
2167-8359
DOI:10.7717/peerj.14954