Back to Search Start Over

Endothelial Cell SMAD6 Balances ACVRL1/Alk1 Function to Regulate Adherens Junctions and Hepatic Vascular Development

Authors :
Molly R Kulikauskas
Morgan Oatley
Tianji Yu
Ziqing Liu
Lauren Matsumura
Elise Kidder
Dana Ruter
Victoria L Bautch
Source :
bioRxiv
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2023.

Abstract

BMP signaling is critical to blood vessel formation and function, but how pathway components regulate vascular development is not well-understood. Here we find that inhibitory SMAD6 functions in endothelial cells to negatively regulate ALK1/ACVRL1-mediated responses, and it is required to prevent vessel dysmorphogenesis and hemorrhage in the embryonic liver vasculature. ReducedAlk1gene dosage rescued embryonic hepatic hemorrhage and microvascular capillarization induced bySmad6deletion in endothelial cellsin vivo. At the cellular level, co-depletion of Smad6 and Alk1 rescued the destabilized junctions and impaired barrier function of endothelial cells depleted for SMAD6 alone. At the mechanistic level, blockade of actomyosin contractility or increased PI3K signaling rescued endothelial junction defects induced by SMAD6 loss. Thus, SMAD6 normally modulates ALK1 function in endothelial cells to regulate PI3K signaling and contractility, and SMAD6 loss increases signaling through ALK1 that disrupts endothelial junctions. ALK1 loss-of-function also disrupts vascular development and function, indicating that balanced ALK1 signaling is crucial for proper vascular development and identifying ALK1 as a “Goldilocks” pathway in vascular biology regulated by SMAD6.

Subjects

Subjects :
Article

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
bioRxiv
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3fcada5d4bec4fb04591a6ece10c0e06