
Endogenous hormone 2‐methoxyestradiol suppresses venous hypertension‐induced angiogenesis through up‐ and down‐regulating p53 and id‐1
Author(s) -
Zou Xiang,
Zhang Li,
Yuan Jie,
Yang Chunjie,
Wu Zehan,
Song Jianping,
Zhu Wei,
Mao Ying,
Chen Liang
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of cellular and molecular medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.44
H-Index - 130
eISSN - 1582-4934
pISSN - 1582-1838
DOI - 10.1111/jcmm.13399
Subject(s) - angiogenesis , in vivo , hypoxia (environmental) , 2 methoxyestradiol , gene knockdown , in vitro , endogeny , cancer research , umbilical vein , biology , medicine , pharmacology , endocrinology , chemistry , biochemistry , apoptosis , microbiology and biotechnology , oxygen , organic chemistry
Brain arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) which associate with angiogenesis due to local hypertension, chronic cerebral ischaemia and tissue hypoxia usually lead to haemorrhage, however, the therapeutic medicine for the disease is still lacking. 2‐methoxyestradiol (2‐ME) has been shown effective in the anti‐angiogenic treatment. This study was conducted to examine whether and how 2‐ME could improve the vascular malformations. Intracranial venous hypertension (VH) model produced in adult male Sprague‐Dawley rats and culture of human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) at the anoxia condition were used to induce in vivo and in vitro angiogenesis, respectively. Lentiviral vectors of ID‐1 and p53 genes and of their siRNA were intracranially injected into rats and transfected into HUVECs to overexpress and down‐regulate these molecules. 2‐ME treatment not only reduced the in vivo progression of brain tissue angiogenesis in the intracranial VH rats and the in vitro increases in microvasculature formation, cellular migration and HIF‐1α expression induced by anoxia in HUVECs but also reversed the up‐regulation of ID‐1 and down‐regulation of p53 in both the in vivo and in vitro angiogenesis models. All of the anti‐angiogenesis effects of 2‐ME observed in VH rats and anoxic HUVECs were abrogated by ID‐1 overexpression and p53 knockdown. Our data collectively suggest that 2‐ME treatment inhibits hypoxia/anoxia‐induced angiogenesis dependently on ID‐1 down‐regulation and p53 up‐regulation, providing a potential alternative medical treatment for un‐ruptured AVM patients.