Endothelial epsin deficiency decreases tumor growth by enhancing VEGF signaling

Epsins are a family of ubiquitin-binding, endocytic clathrin adaptors. Mice lacking both epsins 1 and 2 (Epn1/2) die at embryonic day 10 and exhibit an abnormal vascular phenotype. To examine the angiogenic role of endothelial epsins, we generated mice with constitutive or inducible deletion of Epn1...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of clinical investigation 2012-12, Vol.122 (12), p.4424-4438
Hauptverfasser: Pasula, Satish, Cai, Xiaofeng, Dong, Yunzhou, Messa, Mirko, McManus, John, Chang, Baojun, Liu, Xiaolei, Zhu, Hua, Mansat, Robert Silasi, Yoon, Seon-Joo, Hahn, Scott, Keeling, Jacob, Saunders, Debra, Ko, Genevieve, Knight, John, Newton, Gail, Luscinskas, Francis, Sun, Xiaohong, Towner, Rheal, Lupu, Florea, Xia, Lijun, Cremona, Ottavio, De Camilli, Pietro, Min, Wang, Chen, Hong
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Epsins are a family of ubiquitin-binding, endocytic clathrin adaptors. Mice lacking both epsins 1 and 2 (Epn1/2) die at embryonic day 10 and exhibit an abnormal vascular phenotype. To examine the angiogenic role of endothelial epsins, we generated mice with constitutive or inducible deletion of Epn1/2 in vascular endothelium. These mice exhibited no abnormal phenotypes under normal conditions, suggesting that lack of endothelial epsins 1 and 2 did not affect normal blood vessels. In tumors, however, loss of epsins 1 and 2 resulted in disorganized vasculature, significantly increased vascular permeability, and markedly retarded tumor growth. Mechanistically, we show that VEGF promoted binding of epsin to ubiquitinated VEGFR2. Loss of epsins 1 and 2 specifically impaired endocytosis and degradation of VEGFR2, which resulted in excessive VEGF signaling that compromised tumor vascular function by exacerbating nonproductive leaky angiogenesis. This suggests that tumor vasculature requires a balance in VEGF signaling to provide sufficient productive angiogenesis for tumor development and that endothelial epsins 1 and 2 negatively regulate the output of VEGF signaling. Promotion of excessive VEGF signaling within tumors via a block of epsin 1 and 2 function may represent a strategy to prevent normal angiogenesis in cancer patients who are resistant to anti-VEGF therapies.
ISSN:0021-9738
1558-8238
DOI:10.1172/JCI64537