This study was to determine whether the endothelium of mouse major arteries produces prostacyclin (PGI 2 ) and, if so, to determine how PGI 2 affects vasomotor reactivity and whether cyclo-oxygenase-1 (COX-1) contributes to PGI 2 synthesis. Abdominal aortas, carotid and femoral arteries were isolated from wild-type mice and/or those with COX-1 or -2 deficiency (COX-1 −/− ; COX-2 −/− ) for biochemical and/or functional analyses. The PGI 2 metabolite 6-keto-PGF 1α was analysed with high-performance liquid chromatography-mass spectroscopy, while vasoreactivity was determined with isometric force measurement. Results showed that in the abdominal aorta, ACh evoked endothelium-dependent production of 6-keto-PGF 1α , which was abolished by COX-1 −/− , but not by COX-2 −/− . Interestingly, COX-1 −/− enhanced the dilatation in response to ACh, while PGI 2 , which evoked relaxation of the mesenteric artery, caused contraction that was abolished by antagonizing thromboxane prostanoid (TP) receptors in the abdominal aorta. However, the TP receptor agonist U46619 evoked similar contractions in the abdominal aorta and mesenteric artery. Also, antagonizing TP receptors enhanced the relaxation in response to PGI 2 in mesenteric arteries. Real-time PCR showed that the PGI 2 (IP) receptor mRNA level was lower in the abdominal aorta than in mesenteric arteries. In addition, COX-1 −/− not only abolished the contraction in response to ACh following NO inhibition in abdominal aorta, but also those in the carotid and femoral arteries. These results demonstrate an explicit role for endothelial COX-1 in PGI 2 synthesis and suggest that in given mouse arteries, PGI 2 mediates not dilatation but rather vasoconstrictor activity, possibly due to a low expression or functional presence of IP receptors, which enables PGI 2 to act mainly on TP receptors.
This study aimed to determine whether PGI(2) would be evoked by the endogenous endothelial B(2) receptor agonist bradykinin (BK) in the porcine interlobular renal artery and, if so, to determine how it would influence the vasomotor reaction, and the specific cyclooxygenase (COX) isoform(s) involved in its synthesis. The production of the PGI(2) metabolite 6-keto-PGF(1α) was analyzed with HPLC-mass spectroscopy, while vasomotor reaction to PGI(2) or BK was determined with isometric force measurement. Results showed that BK evoked an increase in the production of 6-keto-PGF(1α), which was abolished by endothelial denudation that removed COX-1 expression, or was reduced by COX-1 inhibition. Interestingly, PGI(2) evoked a potent contraction, which was prevented by antagonizing thromboxane-prostanoid (TP) receptors and was not enhanced by antagonizing the vasodilator PGI(2) (IP) receptors. The IP receptor agonists MRE-269 and iloprost did not induce any relaxation. Moreover, iloprost, which is also a PGI(2) analog, caused a contraction, which was sensitive to TP receptor antagonism, but was to a significantly lesser extent than that of PGI(2). Indeed, IP receptors were not detected by RT-PCR or Western blotting in the vessel. Following nitric oxide synthase (NOS) inhibition, BK also evoked an endothelium-dependent contraction, which was blocked by TP receptor antagonism. In addition, inhibition of COX-1 (but not COX-2) impeded the vasoconstrictor activity of BK and expedited the relaxation induced by the agonist in NOS-intact vessels. These results demonstrate that in the porcine interlobular renal artery BK evokes endothelial COX-1-mediated PGI(2) synthesis, which mainly leads to the activation of TP receptors and a vasoconstrictor response, possibly due to a scarcity of vasodilator activity mediated by IP receptors. Also, our data suggested that the effect of a PGI(2) analog on TP receptors could be reduced compared with that of PGI(2) due to modified structure as with iloprost.
The human genome, like other mammalian genomes, encodes numerous natural antisense transcripts (NATs) that have been classified into head-to-head, tail-to-tail, or fully overlapped categories in reference to their sense transcripts. Evidence for NAT-mediated epigenetic silencing of sense transcription remains scanty. The
DHRS4
gene encodes a metabolic enzyme and forms a gene cluster with its two immediately downstream homologous genes,
DHRS4L2
and
DHRS4L1
, generated by gene duplication. We identified a head-to-head NAT of
DHRS4
, designated AS1DHRS4, which markedly regulates the expression of these three genes in the
DHRS4
gene cluster. By pairing with ongoing sense transcripts, AS1DHRS4 not only mediates deacetylation of histone H3 and demethylation of H3K4 in
cis
for the
DHRS4
gene, but also interacts physically in
trans
with the epigenetic modifiers H3K9- and H3K27-specific histone methyltransferases G9a and EZH2, targeting the promoters of the downstream
DHRS4L2
and
DHRS4L1
genes to induce local repressive H3K9me2 and H3K27me3 histone modifications. Furthermore, AS1DHRS4 induces DNA methylation in the promoter regions of
DHRS4L2
by recruiting DNA methyltransferases. This study demonstrates that AS1DHRS4, as a long noncoding RNA, simultaneously controls the chromatin state of each gene within the
DHRS4
gene cluster in a discriminative manner. This finding provides an example of transcriptional control over the multiple and highly homologous genes in a tight gene cluster, and may help explain the role of antisense RNAs in the regulation of duplicated genes as the result of genomic evolution.
The human DHRS4 gene cluster consists of DHRS4 and two immediately downstream homologous genes, DHRS4L2 and DHRS4L1, generated by evolutionarily gene-duplication events. We previously demonstrated that a head-to-head natural antisense transcript (NAT) of DHRS4, denoted DHRS4-AS1, regulates all three genes of the DHRS4 gene cluster. However, it is puzzling that DHRS4L2 and DHRS4L1 did not evolve their own specific NATs to regulate themselves, as it seems both have retained sequences highly homologous to DHRS4-AS1. In a search of the DHRS4-AS1 region for nearby enhancers, we identified an enhancer located 13.8 kb downstream of the DHRS4-AS1 transcriptional start site. We further showed, by using a chromosome conformation capture (3C) assay, that this enhancer is capable of physically interacting with the DHRS4-AS1 promoter through chromosomal looping. The enhancer produced an eRNA, termed AS1eRNA, that enhanced DHRS4-AS1 transcription by mediating the spatial interactions of the enhancer and DHRS4-AS1 promoter in cooperation with RNA polymerase II and p300/CBP. Moreover, the distributions of activating acetyl-H3 and H3K4me3 modifications were found to be greater at the DHRS4-AS1 promoter than at the homologous duplicated regions. We propose that AS1eRNA-driven DNA looping and activating histone modifications promote the expression of DHRS4-AS1 to economically control the DHRS4 gene cluster.
The objective of this study was to determine the role of cyclooxygenase (COX)-1 or -2 in endothelium-dependent contraction under atherosclerotic conditions. Atherosclerosis was induced in apoE knockout (apoE(-/-)) mice and those with COX-1(-/-) (apoE(-/-)-COX-1(-/-)) by feeding with high fat and cholesterol food. Aortas (abdominal or the whole section) were isolated for functional and/or biochemical analyses. As in non-atherosclerotic conditions, the muscarinic receptor agonist acetylcholine (ACh) evoked an endothelium-dependent, COX-mediated contraction following NO synthase (NOS) inhibition in abdominal aortic rings from atherosclerotic apoE(-/-) mice. Interestingly, COX-1 inhibition not only abolished such a contraction in rings showing normal appearance, but also diminished that in rings with plaques. Accordingly, only a minor contraction (<30% that of apoE(-/-) counterparts) was evoked by ACh (following NOS inhibition) in abdominal aortic rings of atherosclerotic apoE(-/-)-COX-1(-/-) mice with plaques, and none was evoked in those showing normal appearance. Also, the contraction evoked by ACh in apoE(-/-)-COX-1(-/-) abdominal aortic rings with plaques was abolished by non-selective COX inhibition, thromboxane-prostanoid (TP) receptor antagonism, or endothelial denudation. Moreover, it was noted that ACh evoked a predominant production of the prostacyclin (PGI2, which mediates abdominal aortic contraction via TP receptors in mice) metabolite 6-keto-PGF1α, which was again sensitive to COX-1 inhibition or COX-1(-/-). Therefore, in atherosclerotic mouse abdominal aortas, COX-1 can still be the major isoform mediating endothelium-dependent contraction, which probably results largely from PGI2 synthesis as in non-atherosclerotic conditions. In contrast, COX-2 may have only a minor role in such response limited to areas of plaques under the same pathological condition.
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