Ten-eleven translocation-2 (TET2) is a master regulator of smooth muscle cell plasticity

R Liu, Y Jin, WH Tang, L Qin, X Zhang, G Tellides… - Circulation, 2013 - Am Heart Assoc
R Liu, Y Jin, WH Tang, L Qin, X Zhang, G Tellides, J Hwa, J Yu, KA Martin
Circulation, 2013Am Heart Assoc
Background—Smooth muscle cells (SMCs) are remarkably plastic. Their reversible
differentiation is required for growth and wound healing but also contributes to pathologies
such as atherosclerosis and restenosis. Although key regulators of the SMC phenotype,
including myocardin (MYOCD) and KLF4, have been identified, a unifying epigenetic
mechanism that confers reversible SMC differentiation has not been reported. Methods and
Results—Using human SMCs, human arterial tissue, and mouse models, we report that …
Background
Smooth muscle cells (SMCs) are remarkably plastic. Their reversible differentiation is required for growth and wound healing but also contributes to pathologies such as atherosclerosis and restenosis. Although key regulators of the SMC phenotype, including myocardin (MYOCD) and KLF4, have been identified, a unifying epigenetic mechanism that confers reversible SMC differentiation has not been reported.
Methods and Results
Using human SMCs, human arterial tissue, and mouse models, we report that SMC plasticity is governed by the DNA-modifying enzyme ten-eleven translocation-2 (TET2). TET2 and its product, 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (5-hmC), are enriched in contractile SMCs but reduced in dedifferentiated SMCs. TET2 knockdown inhibits expression of key procontractile genes, including MYOCD and SRF, with concomitant transcriptional upregulation of KLF4. TET2 knockdown prevents rapamycin-induced SMC differentiation, whereas TET2 overexpression is sufficient to induce a contractile phenotype. TET2 overexpression also induces SMC gene expression in fibroblasts. Chromatin immunoprecipitation demonstrates that TET2 coordinately regulates phenotypic modulation through opposing effects on chromatin accessibility at the promoters of procontractile versus dedifferentiation-associated genes. Notably, we find that TET2 binds and 5-hmC is enriched in CArG-rich regions of active SMC contractile promoters (MYOCD, SRF, and MYH11). Loss of TET2 and 5-hmC positively correlates with the degree of injury in murine models of vascular injury and human atherosclerotic disease. Importantly, localized TET2 knockdown exacerbates injury response, and local TET2 overexpression restores the 5-hmC epigenetic landscape and contractile gene expression and greatly attenuates intimal hyperplasia in vivo.
Conclusions
We identify TET2 as a novel and necessary master epigenetic regulator of SMC differentiation.
Am Heart Assoc