APA
Baggott, Rhiannon R. & Alfranca, Arantzazu & López Maderuelo, Dolores & Mohamed, Tamer M.A. & Escolano, Amelia & Oller, Jorge & Ornes, Beatriz C. & Kurusamy, Sathishkumar & Rowther, Farjana B. & Brown, James E. & Oceandy, Delvac & Cartwright, Elizabeth J. & Wang, Weiguang & Gómez del Arco, Pablo & Martínez Martínez, Sara & Neyses, Ludwig & Redondo, Juan Miguel & Armesilla, Angel Luis (2014 ) .Plasma Membrane Calcium ATPase Isoform 4 Inhibits Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor-Mediated Angiogenesis Through Interaction With Calcineurin.
ISO 690
Baggott, Rhiannon R. & Alfranca, Arantzazu & López Maderuelo, Dolores & Mohamed, Tamer M.A. & Escolano, Amelia & Oller, Jorge & Ornes, Beatriz C. & Kurusamy, Sathishkumar & Rowther, Farjana B. & Brown, James E. & Oceandy, Delvac & Cartwright, Elizabeth J. & Wang, Weiguang & Gómez del Arco, Pablo & Martínez Martínez, Sara & Neyses, Ludwig & Redondo, Juan Miguel & Armesilla, Angel Luis. 2014 .Plasma Membrane Calcium ATPase Isoform 4 Inhibits Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor-Mediated Angiogenesis Through Interaction With Calcineurin.
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12080/45172
Résumé:
Objective¿Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) has been identified as a crucial regulator of physiological and
pathological angiogenesis. Among the intracellular signaling pathways triggered by VEGF, activation of the calcineurin/
nuclear factor of activated T cells (NFAT) signaling axis has emerged as a critical mediator of angiogenic processes.
We and others previously reported a novel role for the plasma membrane calcium ATPase (PMCA) as an endogenous
inhibitor of the calcineurin/NFAT pathway, via interaction with calcineurin, in cardiomyocytes and breast cancer cells.
However, the functional significance of the PMCA/calcineurin interaction in endothelial pathophysiology has not been
addressed thus far.
Approach and Results¿Using in vitro and in vivo assays, we here demonstrate that the interaction between PMCA4
and calcineurin in VEGF-stimulated endothelial cells leads to downregulation of the calcineurin/NFAT pathway and
to a significant reduction in the subsequent expression of the NFAT-dependent, VEGF-activated, proangiogenic genes
RCAN1.4 and Cox-2. PMCA4-dependent inhibition of calcineurin signaling translates into a reduction in endothelial cell
motility and blood vessel formation that ultimately impairs in vivo angiogenesis by VEGF.
Conclusions¿Given the importance of the calcineurin/NFAT pathway in the regulation of pathological angiogenesis,
targeted modulation of PMCA4 functionality might open novel therapeutic avenues to promote or attenuate new vessel
formation in diseases that occur with angiogenesis. (Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol. 2014;34:2310-2320.)
Key Words: angiogenesis effect ¿ calcium ¿ calcineurin ¿ nuclear factors of activated T cells
¿ plasma membrane calcium¿transporting ATPase