The polarity protein Scrib limits atherosclerosis development in mice

2019 
AIMS: The protein Scrib (Scribble 1) is known to control apico-basal polarity in epithelial cells. The role of polarity proteins in the vascular system remains poorly characterized; however, we previously reported that Scrib maintains the endothelial phenotype and directed migration. On this basis, we hypothesized that Scrib has anti-atherosclerotic functions. METHODS AND RESULTS: Tamoxifen-induced Scrib-knockout mice were crossed with ApoE-/- knockout mice and spontaneous atherosclerosis under high-fat diet, as well as accelerated atherosclerosis in response to partial carotid artery ligation and high-fat diet, was induced. Deletion of Scrib resulted in increased atherosclerosis development in both models. Mechanistically, flow- as well as acetylcholine-induced endothelium-dependent relaxation and AKT phosphorylation was reduced by deletion of Scrib, whereas vascular permeability and leukocyte extravasation were increased after Scrib knockout. Scrib immune pull down in primary carotid endothelial cells and mass spectrometry identified Arhgef7 (Rho Guanine Nucleotide Exchange Factor 7, βPix) as interaction partner. Scrib or Arhgef7 downregulation by siRNA reduced the endothelial barrier function in HUVEC. Gene expression analysis from murine samples and from human biobank material of carotid endarterectomies indicated that loss of Scrib resulted in endothelial dedifferentiation with a decreased expression of endothelial signature genes. CONCLUSIONS: By maintaining a quiescent endothelial phenotype, the polarity protein Scrib elicits antiatherosclerotic functions.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    43
    References
    4
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []