The Journal of Clinical Investigation (Feb 2022)

Non–beta blocker enantiomers of propranolol and atenolol inhibit vasculogenesis in infantile hemangioma

  • Caroline T. Seebauer,
  • Matthew S. Graus,
  • Lan Huang,
  • Alex McCann,
  • Jill Wylie-Sears,
  • Frank Fontaine,
  • Tara Karnezis,
  • David Zurakowski,
  • Steven J. Staffa,
  • Frédéric Meunier,
  • John B. Mulliken,
  • Joyce Bischoff,
  • Mathias Francois

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 132, no. 3

Abstract

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Propranolol and atenolol, current therapies for problematic infantile hemangioma (IH), are composed of R(+) and S(–) enantiomers: the R(+) enantiomer is largely devoid of beta blocker activity. We investigated the effect of R(+) enantiomers of propranolol and atenolol on the formation of IH-like blood vessels from hemangioma stem cells (HemSCs) in a murine xenograft model. Both R(+) enantiomers inhibited HemSC vessel formation in vivo. In vitro, similar to R(+) propranolol, both atenolol and its R(+) enantiomer inhibited HemSC to endothelial cell differentiation. As our previous work implicated the transcription factor sex-determining region Y (SRY) box transcription factor 18 (SOX18) in propranolol-mediated inhibition of HemSC to endothelial differentiation, we tested in parallel a known SOX18 small-molecule inhibitor (Sm4) and show that this compound inhibited HemSC vessel formation in vivo with efficacy similar to that seen with the R(+) enantiomers. We next examined how R(+) propranolol alters SOX18 transcriptional activity. Using a suite of biochemical, biophysical, and quantitative molecular imaging assays, we show that R(+) propranolol directly interfered with SOX18 target gene trans-activation, disrupted SOX18-chromatin binding dynamics, and reduced SOX18 dimer formation. We propose that the R(+) enantiomers of widely used beta blockers could be repurposed to increase the efficiency of current IH treatment and lower adverse associated side effects.

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