Skip to Content
Merck
  • Therapeutic activation of endothelial sphingosine-1-phosphate receptor 1 by chaperone-bound S1P suppresses proliferative retinal neovascularization.

Therapeutic activation of endothelial sphingosine-1-phosphate receptor 1 by chaperone-bound S1P suppresses proliferative retinal neovascularization.

EMBO molecular medicine (2023-03-14)
Colin Niaudet, Bongnam Jung, Andrew Kuo, Steven Swendeman, Edward Bull, Takahiro Seno, Reed Crocker, Zhongjie Fu, Lois E H Smith, Timothy Hla
ABSTRACT

Sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P), the circulating HDL-bound lipid mediator that acts via S1P receptors (S1PR), is required for normal vascular development. The role of this signaling axis in vascular retinopathies is unclear. Here, we show in a mouse model of oxygen-induced retinopathy (OIR) that endothelial overexpression of S1pr1 suppresses while endothelial knockout of S1pr1 worsens neovascular tuft formation. Furthermore, neovascular tufts are increased in Apom-/- mice which lack HDL-bound S1P while they are suppressed in ApomTG mice which have more circulating HDL-S1P. These results suggest that circulating HDL-S1P activation of endothelial S1PR1 suppresses neovascular pathology in OIR. Additionally, systemic administration of ApoM-Fc-bound S1P or a small-molecule Gi-biased S1PR1 agonist suppressed neovascular tuft formation. Circulating HDL-S1P activation of endothelial S1PR1 may be a key protective mechanism to guard against neovascular retinopathies that occur not only in premature infants but also in diabetic patients and aging people.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-Synuclein α Antibody, clone 7B12.2, culture supernatant, clone 7B12.2, Chemicon®
Sigma-Aldrich
Tamoxifen, ≥99%