Endothelial-specific YY1 governs sprouting angiogenesis through directly interacting with RBPJ

2020 
Angiogenesis, the formation of new blood vessels, is tightly regulated by gene transcriptional programs. Yin Ying 1 (YY1) is a ubiquitously distributed transcription factor with diverse and complex biological functions; however, little is known about the cell-type-specific role of YY1 in vascular development and angiogenesis. Here we report that endothelial cell (EC)-specific YY1 deletion in mice led to embryonic lethality as a result of abnormal angiogenesis and vascular defects. Tamoxifen-inducible EC-specific YY1 knockout (YY1iΔEC) mice exhibited a scarcity of retinal sprouting angiogenesis with fewer endothelial tip cells. YY1iΔEC mice also displayed severe impairment of retinal vessel maturation. In an ex vivo mouse aortic ring assay and a human EC culture system, YY1 depletion impaired endothelial sprouting and migration. Mechanistically, YY1 functions as a repressor protein of Notch signaling that controls EC tip-stalk fate determination. YY1 deficiency enhanced Notch-dependent gene expression and reduced tip cell formation. Specifically, YY1 bound to the N-terminal domain of RBPJ (recombination signal binding protein for Ig Kappa J region) and competed with the Notch coactivator MAML1 (mastermind-like protein 1) for binding to RBPJ, thereby impairing the NICD (intracellular domain of the Notch protein)/MAML1/RBPJ complex formation. Our study reveals an essential role of endothelial YY1 in controlling sprouting angiogenesis through directly interacting with RBPJ and forming a YY1-RBPJ nuclear repression complex.
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