Zinc fingers in the pizza pie aorta.
نویسندگان
چکیده
The multifactorial etiology of atherosclerosis includes inflammatory and immune processes that involve numerous cell types, including monocytic and lymphocytic leukocytes, endothelial cells, smooth muscle cells, and fibroblasts. It is likely that each of these cell types, as a contributor to the atherosclerotic process, possesses a gene expression profile unique to its role in disease pathogenesis, although perhaps also dependent on the disease stage, as well as on genetic and environmental factors. Modulation of gene expression patterns by various transcription factors will therefore dictate how a particular cell type contributes to the atherosclerotic process. Krüppel-like factors (KLFs) are a subclass of zinc finger transcription factors originally implicated in cell growth and differentiation. KLF2 and KLF4 in particular regulate the expression of certain genes relevant to atherosclerosis in a shear-dependent manner in endothelial cells and monocytes.1 It is therefore important to understand the mechanisms and consequences of KLF activation in these cell types in vitro and in vivo. Such studies have the potential to uncover previously unknown transcriptional links between shear-dependent monocytic and endothelial processes that may underlie the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis. The study by Atkins et al2 in the issue of Circulation Research addresses this issue directly using mice with a hemizygous deficiency of KLF2 (KLF2 / ) and on the ApoE / background to examine the role of KLF2 in atherosclerosis. Aortic lesion extent was increased 30% to 35% in KLF2 / mice compared to control littermates. The increase in atherosclerosis in the KLF2 / mice was associated with no alterations in aortic expression of the antiinflammatory genes endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) and thrombomodulin, or the proinflammatory gene vascular cell adhesion molecule (VCAM)-1. Lesion macrophage content was not significantly increased in KLF2 / mice, but both lipid uptake and expression of a lipid chaperone protein (aP2/FABP4) were increased in macrophages from KLF2 / mice and were concomitantly reduced in a macrophage cell line overexpressing KLF2. These observations suggest that KLF2 expression is an important modulator of foam cell formation and thereby atherogenesis via regulation of aP2/FABP4 expression. Atkins et al2 show for the first time that an approximate 50% reduction of KLF2 results in an increase in the extent of atherosclerosis in vivo. These experiments imply that global expression of KLF2 exerts an atheroprotective effect in vivo, but they do not determine in which cell type gene expression is being regulated by KLF2 to protect against atheroma formation. Interestingly, Das et al3 recently modulated KLF2 expression to show that KLF2 negatively regulates the expression of proinflammatory genes and processes in monocytes. They also showed that monocytes from patients with severe atherosclerosis and elevated levels of markers for inflammation have an approximate 30% reduction in KLF2 expression. The in vivo data from the KLF2 hemizygous mice therefore correspond closely to KLF2 expression changes in circulating cells from humans with atherosclerosis, highlighting the importance of monocyte/macrophage KLF2 expression levels in the regulation of atherogenesis. Because of the global nature of the KLF2 deletion, the atheroprotective effects of KLF2 identified in the present study cannot be attributed to a particular cell type. The data of Das et al3 discussed above implicate KLF2 regulation of gene expression within the monocytic lineage as a likely mediator, at least in part, of the phenotype. However, KLF2 has been implicated in differentiation of additional cell types that participate in atherogenesis (Figure). KLF2 functions as a key molecular switch in endothelial cells, regulating expression of numerous genes that modulate the inflammatory, thrombotic, angiogenic, and vasoactive properties of endothelial cells.1 KLF2 expression also serves as a regulator of T-cell development and directs their trafficking and recirculation via modulating their chemokine receptor expression patterns.4,5 Finally, KLF2 is a negative regulator of adipogenesis and modulator of lipid metabolism as a result of its ability to inhibit PPAR expression in adipocytes.6 Each of these cell types participates in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis, either directly or indirectly, and therefore may contribute to the observed phenotype. The atheroprone phenotypes in mice with a global reduction of KLF2 expression are quite possibly a compound effect of consequences in multiple cell types. Thus, cell type–specific deletions of KLF2 will be required to determine the relative contribution to the phenotype of KLF2-mediated processes in each cell type. The present study also documents the important observation that the KLFs may exhibit some amount of redundancy. KLF4 expression was increased by 40% in the KLF2 / mice. Such compensatory changes may serve to maintain homeostasis, at least in endothelial cells, in which both KLF2 The opinions expressed in this editorial are not necessarily those of the editors or of the American Heart Association. From the Carolina Cardiovascular Biology Center, Departments of Pathology (J.W.H.) and Medicine (C.P.), School of Medicine, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Correspondence to Cam Patterson, MD, Director, Division of Cardiology and Carolina Cardiovascular Biology Center, University of North Carolina, 8200 Medical Biomolecular Research Building, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7126. E-mail [email protected] (Circ Res. 2008;103:687-689.) © 2008 American Heart Association, Inc.
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ورودعنوان ژورنال:
- Circulation research
دوره 103 7 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2008