The role of LR-TIMAP/PP1c complex in the occurrence and development of no-reflow

The presence of no-reflow can increase the risk of major adverse cardiac events and is widely regarded as an important sign of serious prognosis. Previous studies show that laminin receptor (LR) is closely related to the morphology and function of microvessels. However, whether LR is involved in the...

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Published inEBioMedicine Vol. 65; p. 103251
Main Authors Quan, Xiaoyu, Liu, Xiucheng, Qin, Xichun, Wang, Yuzhuo, Sun, Teng, Li, Zhimin, Zhu, Lidong, Chen, Jiali, Zhou, Yeqing, Singh, Sandeep, Dong, Hongyan, Zhang, Zhongming, Zhang, Hao
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Netherlands Elsevier B.V 01.03.2021
Elsevier
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Summary:The presence of no-reflow can increase the risk of major adverse cardiac events and is widely regarded as an important sign of serious prognosis. Previous studies show that laminin receptor (LR) is closely related to the morphology and function of microvessels. However, whether LR is involved in the occurrence and development of no-reflow is still unknown. In vivo, positron emission tomography (PET) perfusion imaging was performed to detect the effects of intramyocardial gene (LR-AAV and LR-siRNA-AAV) delivery treatment on the degree of no-reflow. In vitro, LC-MS/MS analysis was conducted to identify the LR phosphorylation sites of human cardiac microvascular endothelial cells (HCMECs) treated with oxygen-glucose deprivation (OGD) for 4 h. Western blot analyses were used to evaluate the phosphorylation levels of LR at residues Tyr47 (phospho-Tyr47-LR/pY47-LR) and Thr125 (phospho-Thr125-LR/pT125-LR) and their effects on the phosphorylation of VE-cadherin residue Ser665 (phospho-Ser665-VE-cad). LR over-expression, LRT125A (phosphonull) and LRY47A (phosphonull) treatments were found to reduce the level of phospho-Ser665-VE-cad, and subsequently maintain adherent junctions and endothelial barrier integrity in hypoxic environments. Mechanistically, TIMAP/PP1c can combine with LR on the cell membrane to form a novel LR-TIMAP/PP1c complex. The level of pY47-LR determined the stability of LR-TIMAP/PP1c complex. The binding of TIMAP/PP1c on LR activated the protein phosphatase activity of PP1c and regulated the level of pT125-LR. This study demonstrates that low level of phospho-LR reduces no-reflow area through stabilizing the LR-TIMAP/PP1c complex and promoting the stability of adherens junctions, and may help identify new therapeutic targets for the treatment of no-reflow. [Display omitted]
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These authors contributed equally to this work.
ISSN:2352-3964
2352-3964
DOI:10.1016/j.ebiom.2021.103251