4.8 Article

Perivascular cell-specific knockout of the stem cell pluripotency gene Oct4 inhibits angiogenesis

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 10, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-019-08811-z

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Funding

  1. American Heart Association (AHA) Predoctoral Fellowship [15PRE25670040]
  2. AHA Predoctoral Fellowship [16PRE3097006]
  3. AHA Innovative Research Grant [17IRG33370017]
  4. NIH [R01 HL057353, R01 HL135018, T32 HL007284, R01 HL082838, R01 Ey022063]
  5. Hartwell Foundation
  6. Wagner Fellowship

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The stem cell pluripotency factor Oct4 serves a critical protective role during atherosclerotic plaque development by promoting smooth muscle cell (SMC) investment. Here, we show using Myh11-CreERT2 lineage-tracing with inducible SMC and pericyte (SMC-P) knockout of Oct4 that Oct4 regulates perivascular cell migration and recruitment during angiogenesis. Knockout of Oct4 in perivascular cells significantly impairs perivascular cell migration, increases perivascular cell death, delays endothelial cell migration, and promotes vascular leakage following corneal angiogenic stimulus. Knockout of Oct4 in perivascular cells also impairs perfusion recovery and decreases angiogenesis following hindlimb ischemia. Transcriptomic analyses demonstrate that expression of the migratory gene Slit3 is reduced following loss of Oct4 in cultured SMCs, and in Oct4-deficient perivascular cells in ischemic hindlimb muscle. Together, these results provide evidence that Oct4 plays an essential role within perivascular cells in injury-and hypoxia-induced angiogenesis.

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