Litcius/Paper detail

Endothelial ZEB1 promotes angiogenesis-dependent bone formation and reverses osteoporosis

Rong Fu, Wencong Lv, Ying Xu, Mu-Yun Gong, Xiaojie Chen, Nan Jiang, Yan Xu, Qingqiang Yao, Lei Di, Tao Lu, Liming Wang, Ran Mo, Zhao‐Qiu Wu

2020Nature Communications193 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Recent interest in the control of bone metabolism has focused on a specialized subset of CD31 hi endomucin hi vessels, which are reported to couple angiogenesis with osteogenesis. However, the underlying mechanisms that link these processes together remain largely undefined. Here we show that the zinc-finger transcription factor ZEB1 is predominantly expressed in CD31 hi endomucin hi endothelium in human and mouse bone. Endothelial cell-specific deletion of ZEB1 in mice impairs CD31 hi endomucin hi vessel formation in the bone, resulting in reduced osteogenesis. Mechanistically, ZEB1 deletion reduces histone acetylation on Dll 4 and Notch1 promoters, thereby epigenetically suppressing Notch signaling, a critical pathway that controls bone angiogenesis and osteogenesis. ZEB1 expression in skeletal endothelium declines in osteoporotic mice and humans. Administration of Zeb1 -packaged liposomes in osteoporotic mice restores impaired Notch activity in skeletal endothelium, thereby promoting angiogenesis-dependent osteogenesis and ameliorating bone loss. Pharmacological reversal of the low ZEB1/Notch signaling may exert therapeutic benefit in osteoporotic patients by promoting angiogenesis-dependent bone formation.

Topics & Concepts

AngiogenesisCD31Cell biologyCancer researchBone remodelingNotch signaling pathwayNeovascularizationTranscription factorSignal transductionChemistryBiologyEndocrinologyBiochemistryGeneTGF-β signaling in diseasesBone Metabolism and DiseasesAngiogenesis and VEGF in Cancer