Cell Reports (Feb 2022)

Bivalent-histone-marked immediate-early gene regulation is vital for VEGF-responsive angiogenesis

  • Yasuharu Kanki,
  • Masashi Muramatsu,
  • Yuri Miyamura,
  • Kenta Kikuchi,
  • Yoshiki Higashijima,
  • Ryo Nakaki,
  • Jun-ichi Suehiro,
  • Yuji Sasaki,
  • Yoshiaki Kubota,
  • Haruhiko Koseki,
  • Hiroshi Morioka,
  • Tatsuhiko Kodama,
  • Mitsuyoshi Nakao,
  • Daisuke Kurotaki,
  • Hiroyuki Aburatani,
  • Takashi Minami

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 38, no. 6
p. 110332

Abstract

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Summary: Endothelial cells (ECs) are phenotypically heterogeneous, mainly due to their dynamic response to the tissue microenvironment. Vascular endothelial cell growth factor (VEGF), the best-known angiogenic factor, activates calcium-nuclear factor of activated T cells (NFAT) signaling following acute angiogenic gene transcription. Here, we evaluate the global mapping of VEGF-mediated dynamic transcriptional events, focusing on major histone-code profiles using chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing (ChIP-seq). Remarkably, the gene loci of immediate-early angiogenic transcription factors (TFs) exclusively acquire bivalent H3K4me3-H3K27me3 double-positive histone marks after the VEGF stimulus. Moreover, NFAT-associated Pax transactivation domain-interacting protein (PTIP) directs bivalently marked TF genes transcription through a limited polymerase II running. The non-canonical polycomb1 variant PRC1.3 specifically binds to and allows the transactivation of PRC2-enriched bivalent angiogenic TFs until conventional PRC1-mediated gene silencing is achieved. Knockdown of these genes abrogates post-natal aberrant neovessel formation via the selective inhibition of indispensable bivalent angiogenic TF gene transcription. Collectively, the reported dynamic histone mark landscape may uncover the importance of immediate-early genes and the development of advanced anti-angiogenic strategies.

Keywords