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Publication : Hic-5 deficiency enhances mechanosensitive apoptosis and modulates vascular remodeling.

First Author  Kim-Kaneyama JR Year  2011
Journal  J Mol Cell Cardiol Volume  50
Issue  1 Pages  77-86
PubMed ID  20933520 Mgi Jnum  J:223628
Mgi Id  MGI:5659831 Doi  10.1016/j.yjmcc.2010.09.024
Citation  Kim-Kaneyama JR, et al. (2011) Hic-5 deficiency enhances mechanosensitive apoptosis and modulates vascular remodeling. J Mol Cell Cardiol 50(1):77-86
abstractText  Forces associated with blood flow are crucial not only for blood vessel development but also for regulation of vascular pathology. Although there have been many studies characterizing the responses to mechanical stimuli, molecular mechanisms linking biological responses to mechanical forces remain unclear. Hic-5 (hydrogen peroxide-inducible clone-5) is a focal adhesion adaptor protein proposed as a candidate for a mediator of mechanotransduction. In the present study, we generated Hic-5-deficient mice by targeted mutation. Mice lacking Hic-5 are viable and fertile, and show no obvious histological abnormalities including vasculature. However, after wire injury of the femoral artery in Hic-5 deficient mice, histological recovery of arterial media was delayed due to enhanced apoptosis of vascular wall cells, whereas neointima formation was enhanced. Stretch-induced apoptosis was enhanced in cultured vascular smooth muscle cells (vascular SMCs) from Hic-5 deficient mice. Mechanical stress also induced the alteration of intracellular distribution of vinculin from focal adhesions to the whole cytoplasm in SMCs. Immunoelectron microscopic study of vascular SMCs from a wire-injured artery demonstrated that vinculin was dispersed in the nucleus and the cytoplasm in Hic-5-deficient mice whereas vinculin was localized mainly in the sub-plasma membrane region in wild type mice. Our findings indicate that Hic-5 may serve as a key regulator in mechanosensitive vascular remodeling.
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