LincRNA-p21 Regulates Neointima Formation, Vascular Smooth Muscle Cell Proliferation, Apoptosis, and Atherosclerosis by Enhancing p53 Activity

Gengze Wu(Boston Children's Hospital), Jin Cai(Boston Children's Hospital), Yu Han(Boston Children's Hospital), Jinghai Chen(Boston Children's Hospital), Zhan‐Peng Huang(Boston Children's Hospital), Caiyu Chen(Boston Children's Hospital), Yue Cai(Boston Children's Hospital), Hefei Huang(Boston Children's Hospital), Yujia Yang(Boston Children's Hospital), Yukai Liu(Boston Children's Hospital), Zaicheng Xu(Boston Children's Hospital), Duofen He(Boston Children's Hospital), Xiaoqun Zhang(Boston Children's Hospital), Xiaoyun Hu(Boston Children's Hospital), Luca Pinello(Boston Children's Hospital), Dan Zhong(Boston Children's Hospital), Fengtian He(Boston Children's Hospital), Guo‐Cheng Yuan(Boston Children's Hospital), Da‐Zhi Wang(Boston Children's Hospital), Chunyu Zeng(Boston Children's Hospital)
Circulation
August 26, 2014
Cited by 484

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) have recently been implicated in many biological processes and diseases. Atherosclerosis is a major risk factor for cardiovascular disease. However, the functional role of lncRNAs in atherosclerosis is largely unknown. METHODS AND RESULTS: We identified lincRNA-p21 as a key regulator of cell proliferation and apoptosis during atherosclerosis. The expression of lincRNA-p21 was dramatically downregulated in atherosclerotic plaques of ApoE(-/-) mice, an animal model for atherosclerosis. Through loss- and gain-of-function approaches, we showed that lincRNA-p21 represses cell proliferation and induces apoptosis in vascular smooth muscle cells and mouse mononuclear macrophage cells in vitro. Moreover, we found that inhibition of lincRNA-p21 results in neointimal hyperplasia in vivo in a carotid artery injury model. Genome-wide analysis revealed that lincRNA-p21 inhibition dysregulated many p53 targets. Furthermore, lincRNA-p21, a transcriptional target of p53, feeds back to enhance p53 transcriptional activity, at least in part, via binding to mouse double minute 2 (MDM2), an E3 ubiquitin-protein ligase. The association of lincRNA-p21 and MDM2 releases MDM2 repression of p53, enabling p53 to interact with p300 and to bind to the promoters/enhancers of its target genes. Finally, we show that lincRNA-p21 expression is decreased in patients with coronary artery disease. CONCLUSIONS: Our studies identify lincRNA-p21 as a novel regulator of cell proliferation and apoptosis and suggest that this lncRNA could serve as a therapeutic target to treat atherosclerosis and related cardiovascular disorders.


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