Elevated endothelial Sox2 causes lumen disruption and cerebral arteriovenous malformations

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Abstract

Lumen integrity in vascularization requires fully differentiated endothelial cells (ECs). Here, we report that endothelial-mesenchymal transitions (EndMTs) emerged in ECs of cerebral arteriovenous malformation (AVMs) and caused disruption of the lumen or lumen disorder. We show that excessive Sry-box 2 (Sox2) signaling was responsible for the EndMTs in cerebral AVMs. EC-specific suppression of Sox2 normalized endothelial differentiation and lumen formation and improved the cerebral AVMs. Epigenetic studies showed that induction of Sox2 altered the cerebral-endothelial transcriptional landscape and identified jumonji domain–containing protein 5 (JMJD5) as a direct target of Sox2. Sox2 interacted with JMJD5 to induce EndMTs in cerebral ECs. Furthermore, we utilized a high-throughput system to identify the β-adrenergic antagonist pronethalol as an inhibitor of Sox2 expression. Treatment with pronethalol stabilized endothelial differentiation and lumen formation, which limited the cerebral AVMs.

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Yao, J., Wu, X., Zhang, D., Wang, L., Zhang, L., Reynolds, E. X., … Yao, Y. (2019). Elevated endothelial Sox2 causes lumen disruption and cerebral arteriovenous malformations. Journal of Clinical Investigation, 129(8), 3121–3133. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI125965

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