Flow-sensitive HEG1 controls eNOS activity to prevent endothelial dysfunction, hypertension, and atherosclerosis

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Abstract

Hypertension (HTN), the chronic elevation of blood pressure, accounts for more atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease deaths than any other modifiable risk factor.1In the arteries, stable blood flow (s-flow) drives healthy, atheroprotective endothelial cell (EC) functions including nitric oxide (NO) production, barrier function, and anti-inflammatory programs via the action of flow-sensitive proteins. We showed that s-flow stimulates Heart-of-Glass 1 (HEG1) protein expression, localization to cell-cell junctions, and secretion from ECs.2We found that conditional, endothelial cell-specific knockout of (Heg1ECKO) exacerbates atherosclerosis2, however the mechanism was unknown. Here, we report a new role of HEG1 in controlling EC dysfunction, hypertension and atherosclerosis. We discover a novel mechanism: HEG1 regulates NO bioavailability via a flow-dependent HEG1-eNOS interaction (endothelial nitric oxide synthase, NOS3).Heg1ECKOdevelops spontaneous hypertension and severe atherosclerosis, both of which are effectively treated by Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme inhibition (ACEi). UK BioBank and Swedish cohort studies reveal that plasma HEG1 levels are associated with hypertension and cardiovascular disease risk.3,4Our findings suggest HEG1 may serve as a biomarker to advance personalized therapies for EC dysfunction, hypertension, and atherosclerosis.

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