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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Paraoxonase-2 regulates coagulation activation through endothelial tissue factor
Lisa SpieckerKerstin JurkWolfram RufJohn F. TeiberSven HorkeKathrin SchwierczekPetra WilgenbusHuige LiJulia EbertMareike DöhrmannNing Xiasubject
0301 basic medicineEndotheliumImmunologyInflammation030204 cardiovascular system & hematologymedicine.disease_causeModels BiologicalBiochemistryThromboplastinMice03 medical and health sciencesTissue factor0302 clinical medicinemedicineAnimalsHumansThromboplastinPlateletEndothelial dysfunctionBlood CoagulationInflammationMice KnockoutAryldialkylphosphataseChemistryEndothelial CellsCell BiologyHematologymedicine.diseaseEndothelial stem cellOxidative Stress030104 developmental biologymedicine.anatomical_structureCancer researchCytokinesInflammation Mediatorsmedicine.symptomOxidation-ReductionOxidative stressdescription
Oxidative stress and inflammation of the vessel wall contribute to prothrombotic states. The antioxidative protein paraoxonase-2 (PON2) shows reduced expression in human atherosclerotic plaques and endothelial cells in particular. Supporting a direct role for PON2 in cardiovascular diseases, Pon2 deficiency in mice promotes atherogenesis through incompletely understood mechanisms. Here, we show that deregulated redox regulation in Pon2 deficiency causes vascular inflammation and abnormalities in blood coagulation. In unchallenged Pon2-/- mice, we find increased oxidative stress and endothelial dysfunction. Bone marrow transplantation experiments and studies with endothelial cells provide evidence that increased inflammation, indicated by circulating interleukin-6 levels, originates from Pon2 deficiency in the vasculature. Isolated endothelial cells from Pon2-/- mice display increased tissue factor (TF) activity in vitro. Coagulation times were shortened and platelet procoagulant activity increased in Pon2-/- mice relative to wild-type controls. Coagulation abnormalities of Pon2-/- mice were normalized by anti-TF treatment, demonstrating directly that TF increases coagulation. PON2 reexpression in endothelial cells by conditional reversal of the knockout Pon2 cassette, restoration in the vessel wall using bone marrow chimeras, or treatment with the antioxidant N-acetylcysteine normalized the procoagulant state. These experiments delineate a PON2 redox-dependent mechanism that regulates endothelial cell TF activity and prevents systemic coagulation activation and inflammation.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2017-09-18 | Blood |