Alternative Splicing in Angiogenesis
Abstract
:1. Alternative Splicing
1.1. The Splicing Reaction
1.2. Regulation of Alternative Splicing
2. Angiogenesis
Angiogenic Vessel Formation
3. Splicing in Angiogenesis
3.1. Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor-A (VEGF-A)
3.2. Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Receptors (VEGFRs)
3.3. Neuropilins (NRPs)
3.4. Fibroblast Growth Factor Receptors (FGFRs)
3.5. Vasohibins
3.6. Hypoxia Inducible Factor-α (HIF-α)
3.7. Angiopoietin
4. Manipulation of Alternative Splicing as a Potential Therapy for Angiogenic Associated Diseases
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Gene | Splice Variants | Function |
---|---|---|
VEGF-A | VEGF-A111 | Proangiogenic. Diffusible [33,34] |
VEGF-A121 | Proangiogenic. Diffusible. Implicated in tumorigenesis [33,35,36] | |
VEGF-A145 | Proangiogenic. Bind to cell surface and extracellular matrix [33,34] | |
VEGF-A165 | Proangiogenic. Moderately diffusible. Implicated in tumorigenesis [33,36] | |
VEGF-A189 | Proangiogenic. Implicated in tumorigenesis [33,36,37] | |
VEGF-A206 | Proangiogenic. Strongly bind to cell surface and ECM [33,37] | |
VEGF-A183 | Proangiogenic [33] | |
VEGF-Axxxb | Anti-angiogenic. Downregulated in cancer, diabetic retinopathy, Denys Drash syndrome, retinal vein occlusion. Upregulated in systemic sclerosis and asthma [33,38] | |
VEGFR1 | sVEGFR1 | Potent anti-angiogenic [39] |
VEGFR2 | sVEGFR2 | Decreases lymphangiogenesis. Downregulated in neuroblastoma [39] |
esVEGFR2 | Decreases lymphangiogenesis [39] | |
NRP-1 | s11NRP1, s12NRP1, sIIINRP1, sIVNRP1 | Soluble isoform. Antagonists of NRP1 signalling. Anti-angiogenic and anti-tumorigenic [40] |
NRP1-ΔE16 | No functional difference to full length NRP1 [41] | |
NRP1Δ7 | Affects glycosylation status of NRP1. Anti-tumorigenic in prostate cancer and breast cancer cells [42] | |
FGFRs | IIIb | EMT. Found in epithelial tissues. Evidence as a tumour suppressor and as a tumour promoter [43,44] |
IIIc | EMT. Found in mesenchymal tissues. Tumourigenic [43] | |
FGFRα | Contains autoinhibitory IgI domain which results in a lower affinity for FGFs and decreased signalling compared to FGFRβ [45,46] | |
FGFRβ | Higher affinity for FGFs and enhanced signalling. Increases proliferation and linked to tumourigenesis [43,45,46] | |
Soluble receptors | Can be found in locations in the cell other than the cell membrane. Precise function unknown [43,45] | |
C1, C2 and C3 | C3 has the most transforming activity, C2 has moderate transforming activity and C1 has the least transforming activity. C3 implicated in oncogenesis [47] | |
Deletion of the VT motif | Prevention of binding of some effector molecules. Suggested to be unable to activate the downstream Ras/MAPK signalling pathway [48] | |
Vasohibin-1 | VASH1A and VASH-1B | Both are anti-angiogenic. VASH-1A promotes normalisation of abnormal tumour blood vessels. VASH-1B prunes vasculature [49,50] |
Vasohibin-2 | 355aa | Predominantly expressed in HUVECs. Function unknown [51] |
290aa | Anti-angiogenic activity [52] | |
311aa, 156aa, 117aa, 104aa | Function unknown | |
HIF-1α | HIF-1αΔ11 | Promotes tumorigenesis through enhancement of HIF activity [52] |
HIF-1αΔ12 and HIF-1αΔ11&12 | Inhibits dimerisation of HIF-1α and HIF-1β. Act as dominant regulators of HIF-1 transcription [53] | |
HIF-1αΔ14 | Less potent activator of HIF-1 transcription than canonical form of HIF-1α [54] | |
HIF-1α417 | Amplifies HIF-1β-mediated transcription of EPO gene [53] | |
HIF-1TAG | Function unknown | |
HIF-1α Alt1 | Function unknown | |
HIF-3α | IPAS | Dimerises with HIF-α subunits but cannot initiate transcription of HIF target genes, such as VEGF. Dampens angiogenesis [53,55,56] |
HIF-3α4 | Forms complex with HIF-1α and prevents HIF transcription. Hampers angiogenesis and proliferation [55] | |
Ang-1 | 1.5 kb, 1.3 kb | Bind to Tie-2 and induce its autophosphorylation [57] |
0.9 kb, 0.7 kb | Bind to Tie-2 but do not induce its autophosphorylation [57] | |
Ang-2 | Ang-2B | Not precise function but indication of inactivation of the vasculature and vascular remodelling [58] |
Ang-2443 | Antagonist of Tie-2 signalling activation. Suggestive role in the regulation of inflammatory processes [59] |
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Bowler, E.; Oltean, S. Alternative Splicing in Angiogenesis. Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2019, 20, 2067. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms20092067
Bowler E, Oltean S. Alternative Splicing in Angiogenesis. International Journal of Molecular Sciences. 2019; 20(9):2067. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms20092067
Chicago/Turabian StyleBowler, Elizabeth, and Sebastian Oltean. 2019. "Alternative Splicing in Angiogenesis" International Journal of Molecular Sciences 20, no. 9: 2067. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms20092067
APA StyleBowler, E., & Oltean, S. (2019). Alternative Splicing in Angiogenesis. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 20(9), 2067. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms20092067