Molecular Therapy: Nucleic Acids (Jun 2024)

Control of endothelial cell function and arteriogenesis by MEG3:EZH2 epigenetic regulation of integrin expression

  • Hywel Dunn-Davies,
  • Tatiana Dudnakova,
  • Antonella Nogara,
  • Julie Rodor,
  • Anita C. Thomas,
  • Elisa Parish,
  • Philippe Gautier,
  • Alison Meynert,
  • Igor Ulitsky,
  • Paolo Madeddu,
  • Andrea Caporali,
  • Andrew Baker,
  • David Tollervey,
  • Tijana Mitić

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 35, no. 2
p. 102173

Abstract

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Epigenetic processes involving long non-coding RNAs regulate endothelial gene expression. However, the underlying regulatory mechanisms causing endothelial dysfunction remain to be elucidated. Enhancer of zeste homolog 2 (EZH2) is an important rheostat of histone H3K27 trimethylation (H3K27me3) that represses endothelial targets, but EZH2 RNA binding capacity and EZH2:RNA functional interactions have not been explored in post-ischemic angiogenesis. We used formaldehyde/UV-assisted crosslinking ligation and sequencing of hybrids and identified a new role for maternally expressed gene 3 (MEG3). MEG3 formed the predominant RNA:RNA hybrid structures in endothelial cells. Moreover, MEG3:EZH2 assists recruitment onto chromatin. By EZH2-chromatin immunoprecipitation, following MEG3 depletion, we demonstrated that MEG3 controls recruitment of EZH2/H3K27me3 onto integrin subunit alpha4 (ITGA4) promoter. Both MEG3 knockdown or EZH2 inhibition (A-395) promoted ITGA4 expression and improved endothelial cell migration and adhesion to fibronectin in vitro. The A-395 inhibitor re-directed MEG3-assisted chromatin remodeling, offering a direct therapeutic benefit by increasing endothelial function and resilience. This approach subsequently increased the expression of ITGA4 in arterioles following ischemic injury in mice, thus promoting arteriogenesis. Our findings show a context-specific role for MEG3 in guiding EZH2 to repress ITGA4. Novel therapeutic strategies could antagonize MEG3:EZH2 interaction for pre-clinical studies.

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