Abstract

MicroRNA-22 (miR-22) has recently been reported to play a regulatory role during vascular smooth muscle cell (VSMC) differentiation from stem cells, but little is known about its target genes and related pathways in mature VSMC phenotypic modulation or its clinical implication in neointima formation following vascular injury. We applied a wire-injury mouse model, and local delivery of AgomiR-22 or miR-22 inhibitor, as well, to explore the therapeutic potential of miR-22 in vascular diseases. Furthermore, normal and diseased human femoral arteries were harvested, and various in vivo, ex vivo, and in vitro models of VSMC phenotype switching were conducted to examine miR-22 expression during VSMC phenotype switching. Expression of miR-22 was closely regulated during VSMC phenotypic modulation. miR-22 overexpression significantly increased expression of VSMC marker genes and inhibited VSMC proliferation and migration, whereas the opposite effect was observed when endogenous miR-22 was knocked down. As expected, 2 previously reported miR-22 target genes, MECP2 (methyl-CpG binding protein 2) and histone deacetylase 4, exhibited a regulatory role in VSMC phenotypic modulation. A transcriptional regulator and oncoprotein, EVI1 (ecotropic virus integration site 1 protein homolog), has been identified as a novel miR-22 target gene in VSMC phenotypic modulation. It is noteworthy that overexpression of miR-22 in the injured vessels significantly reduced the expression of its target genes, decreased VSMC proliferation, and inhibited neointima formation in wire-injured femoral arteries, whereas the opposite effect was observed with local application of a miR-22 inhibitor to injured arteries. We next examined the clinical relevance of miR-22 expression and its target genes in human femoral arteries. We found that miR-22 expression was significantly reduced, whereas MECP2 and EVI1 expression levels were dramatically increased, in diseased in comparison with healthy femoral human arteries. This inverse relationship between miR-22 and MECP2 and EVI1 was evident in both healthy and diseased human femoral arteries. Our data demonstrate that miR-22 and EVI1 are novel regulators of VSMC function, specifically during neointima hyperplasia, offering a novel therapeutic opportunity for treating vascular diseases.

Highlights

  • MicroRNA-22 has recently been reported to play a regulatory role during vascular smooth muscle cell (VSMC) differentiation from stem cells, but little is known about its target genes and related pathways in mature VSMC phenotypic modulation or its clinical implication in neointima formation following vascular injury

  • We show that microRNA-22 is a novel mediator of vascular smooth muscle cell phenotypic modulation and neointima formation

  • We demonstrate that miR-22 controls vascular smooth muscle cell phenotype and injury-induced arterial remodeling by modulating multiple target genes (MECP2, histone deacetylase 4 (HDAC4), and EVI1)

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Summary

Methods

We applied a wire-injury mouse model, and local delivery of AgomiR-22 or miR-22 inhibitor, as well, to explore the therapeutic potential of miR-22 in vascular diseases. MiR-22 Promoter, EVI1 3ʹ–Untranslated Region Reporter, and Mutation of miR-22 Binding Site Within EVI1 3ʹ–Untranslated Region Reporter miR-22 promoter DNA was amplified from mouse genomic DNA by polymerase chain reaction using primers shown in Table I in the online-only Data Supplement. Amplified DNA fragments were cloned into the Kpn I and Mlu I sites of the pGL3-basic vector (Promega), designated as pGL3-miR-22. Reporter vectors harboring 3ʹ–untranslated region (3ʹ-UTR) sequences of the murine EVI1 were created using cDNA from VSMCs. The 3ʹ-flanking 3ʹ-UTR (11-1142 nucleotides of the 3ʹ-UTR region) of murine EVI1 gene (NM_007963) was amplified by polymerase chain reaction with primers shown in Table I in the online-only Data Supplement and cloned into the Sac I and Mlu I sites of the pmiR-reporter-basic vector (Ambion, Applied Biosystems), designated as pmiR-Luc-EVI1WT. Mouse Femoral Artery Denudation Injury and Perivascular Delivery of miR-22 AgomiRs or LNA-miR-22

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