Research Center of the Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Sherbrooke (C.M., T.B., J.L., E.B., S.R., V.B., M.P., A.G., F.L., P.G.), Université de Sherbrooke, Québec, Canada.
Department of Surgery (M.-A.D.), Université de Sherbrooke, Québec, Canada.
Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol. 2021 Sep;41(9):2469-2482. doi: 10.1161/ATVBAHA.121.316638. Epub 2021 Jul 29.
Critical limb ischemia is a major complication of diabetes characterized by insufficient collateral vessel development and proper growth factor signaling unresponsiveness. Although mainly deactivated by hypoxia, phosphatases are important players in the deregulation of proangiogenetic pathways. Previously, SHP-1 (Scr homology 2-containing phosphatase-1) was found to be associated with the downregulation of growth factor actions in the diabetic muscle. Thus, we aimed to gain further understanding of the impact of SHP-1 on smooth muscle cell (SMC) function under hypoxic and diabetic conditions.
Despite being inactivated under hypoxic conditions, high glucose level exposure sustained SHP-1 phosphatase activity in SMC and increased its interaction with PDGFR (platelet-derived growth factor receptor)-β, thus reducing PDGF proangiogenic actions. Overexpression of an inactive form of SHP-1 fully restored PDGF-induced proliferation, migration, and signaling pathways in SMC exposed to high glucose and hypoxia. Nondiabetic and diabetic mice with deletion of SHP-1 specifically in SMC were generated. Ligation of the femoral artery was performed, and blood flow was measured for 4 weeks. Blood flow reperfusion, vascular density and maturation, and limb survival were all improved while vascular apoptosis was attenuated in diabetic SMC-specific SHP-1 null mice as compared to diabetic mice.
Diabetes and high glucose level exposure maintained SHP-1 activity preventing hypoxia-induced PDGF actions in SMC. Specific deletion of SHP-1 in SMC partially restored blood flow reperfusion in the diabetic ischemic limb. Therefore, local modulation of SHP-1 activity in SMC could represent a potential therapeutic avenue to improve the proangiogenic properties of SMC under ischemia and diabetes.
严重肢体缺血是糖尿病的一种主要并发症,其特征为侧支血管发育不足和适当的生长因子信号反应迟钝。尽管主要由缺氧失活,但磷酸酶是调节血管生成途径失调的重要因素。先前发现 SHP-1(Src 同源 2 结构域含有磷酸酶-1)与糖尿病肌肉中生长因子作用的下调有关。因此,我们旨在进一步了解 SHP-1 在缺氧和糖尿病条件下对平滑肌细胞(SMC)功能的影响。
尽管在缺氧条件下失活,但高葡萄糖水平暴露持续增强 SMC 中的 SHP-1 磷酸酶活性,并增加其与血小板衍生生长因子受体-β(PDGFR-β)的相互作用,从而降低 PDGF 的促血管生成作用。在暴露于高葡萄糖和缺氧的 SMC 中转染无活性形式的 SHP-1 可完全恢复 PDGF 诱导的增殖、迁移和信号通路。生成了 SHP-1 特异性缺失于 SMC 的非糖尿病和糖尿病小鼠。进行股动脉结扎,并测量 4 周的血流。与糖尿病小鼠相比,糖尿病 SMC 特异性 SHP-1 缺失小鼠的血流再灌注、血管密度和成熟度以及肢体存活率均得到改善,而血管凋亡则减弱。
糖尿病和高葡萄糖水平暴露维持 SHP-1 活性,防止缺氧诱导的 SMC 中 PDGF 作用。SMC 中 SHP-1 的特异性缺失部分恢复了糖尿病缺血肢体的血流再灌注。因此,SMC 中 SHP-1 活性的局部调节可能是改善缺血和糖尿病条件下 SMC 促血管生成特性的潜在治疗途径。