Tollip Negatively Regulates Vascular Smooth Muscle Cell-Mediated Neointima Formation by Suppressing Akt-Dependent Signaling

Tollip通过抑制Akt依赖性信号传导负向调控血管平滑肌细胞介导的新内膜形成

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作者:Hong Zhi ,Fu-Han Gong ,Wen-Lin Cheng ,Kongbo Zhu ,Long Chen ,Yuyu Yao ,Xingzhou Ye ,Xue-Yong Zhu ,Hongliang Li

Abstract

Background: Tollip, a well-established endogenous modulator of Toll-like receptor signaling, is involved in cardiovascular diseases. The aim of this study was to investigate the role of Tollip in neointima formation and its associated mechanisms. Methods and results: In this study, transient increases in Tollip expression were observed in platelet-derived growth factor-BB-treated vascular smooth muscle cells and following vascular injury in mice. We then applied loss-of-function and gain-of-function approaches to elucidate the effects of Tollip on neointima formation. While exaggerated neointima formation was observed in Tollip-deficient murine neointima formation models, Tollip overexpression alleviated vascular injury-induced neointima formation by preventing vascular smooth muscle cell proliferation, dedifferentiation, and migration. Mechanistically, we demonstrated that Tollip overexpression may exert a protective role in the vasculature by suppressing Akt-dependent signaling, which was further confirmed in rescue experiments using the Akt-specific inhibitor (AKTI). Conclusions: Our findings indicate that Tollip protects against neointima formation by negatively regulating vascular smooth muscle cell proliferation, dedifferentiation, and migration in an Akt-dependent manner. Upregulation of Tollip may be a promising strategy for treating vascular remodeling-related diseases. Keywords: Tollip; differentiation; migration; neointima formation; proliferation; vascular smooth muscle.

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