Perturbed collagen metabolism underlies lymphatic recanalization failure in Gata2 heterozygous deficient mice

Author:

Watanabe-Asaka Tomomi1ORCID,Hayashi Moyuru1,Harada Takuya1,Uemura Satoshi2,Takai Jun2,Nakamura Yasuhiro3,Moriguchi Takashi2,Kawai Yoshiko1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Physiology, Tohoku Medical and Pharmaceutical University , School of Medicine

2. Division of Medical Biochemistry, Tohoku Medical and Pharmaceutical University , School of Medicine

3. Tohoku Medical and Pharmaceutical University, School of Medicine Division of Pathology, 983-8536 Japan

Abstract

Abstract Lymphedema has become a global health issue following the growing number of cancer surgeries. Curative or supportive therapeutics have long been awaited for this refractory condition. Transcription factor GATA2 is crucial in lymphatic development and maintenance, as GATA2 haploinsufficient disease often manifests as lymphedema. We recently demonstrated that Gata2 heterozygous deficient mice displayed delayed lymphatic recanalization upon lymph node resection. However, whether GATA2 contributes to lymphatic regeneration by functioning in the damaged lymph vessels' microenvironment remains explored. In this study, our integrated analysis demonstrated that dermal collagen fibers were more densely accumulated in the Gata2 heterozygous deficient mice. The collagen metabolism-related transcriptome was perturbed, and collagen matrix contractile activity was aberrantly increased in Gata2 heterozygous embryonic fibroblasts. Notably, soluble collagen placement ameliorated delayed lymphatic recanalization, presumably by modulating the stiffness of the extracellular matrix around the resection site of Gata2 heterozygous deficient mice. Our results provide valuable insights into mechanisms underlying GATA2-haploinsufficiency-mediated lymphedema and shed light on potential therapeutic avenues for this intractable disease.

Funder

Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT) of Japan

Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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1. Update February 2024;Lymphatic Research and Biology;2024-02-01

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