From a pregnancy-specific standpoint, VEGF is known to be a product of both the uterus [
32] and the placenta [
24] and is critical for uteroplacental angiogenesis [
2]. VEGF
165 production in particular is also known to increase during critical periods of pregnancy in humans and sheep [
33,
34]. VEGF
165 gene expression in the placenta may in part be driven by local hypoxia [
7]. Of interest, pregnancy is also associated with higher levels of estrogen [
35], which may also regulate expression of VEGFR isoforms in uterine tissues including vascular endothelium [
36] and may act on UAEC to stimulate VEGF production and capillary tube-like formation (R. R. Magness, personal communication). Thus, VEGF may act both alone and as a partial mediator of estrogen action to control blood flow through the uteroplacental unit. The need for a greater understanding of the role of VEGF in control of vascular function in normal pregnancy and diseases of pregnancy is clear, yet reports of alterations in levels or isoforms of VEGF, PlGF-1, or sFlt-1 in preeclamptic pregnancy show major quantitative differences which may be due to methodologic considerations [
9]. Bearing that in mind, studies such as those of Polliotti et al. [
37] and Levine et al. [
8] have attempted to confirm that circulating VEGF peptide family member levels are altered in pregnancy, or that isoforms of VEGF or PlGF-1 are altered in preeclamptic pregnancy. Nonetheless, it is absolutely clear that the hypoxia common to many pregnancy-related disorders (including preeclampsia and intrauterine growth retardation) leads to an increase in placental
production of VEGF family peptides and probably sFlt-1 [
7,
38]. Thus while methodologic difficulties and interaction with sFlt-1 continue to make it difficult to reliably determine if the levels of bioactive VEGF family proteins actually rise in the circulation, local levels of these peptide hormones are elevated at the uteroplacental interface and, more importantly, are altered relative to each other. The increases in sFlt-1 may also alter relative VEGFR subtype expression in endothelium, changing the relative level of VEGFR-2 vs VEGFR-1 and/or neuropilin-1 [
10,
11]. Either way such studies suggest normal cell function requires a balance of VEGF family peptides relative to VEGFR proteins which, if disturbed, will likely lead to inappropriate signaling inside the cell and altered physiologic control. Despite the ongoing debate on the possible changing levels of VEGF family peptides, a fundamental understanding of the positive vs negative effects of VEGF and its associated receptors in the uterine circulation requires us to first know what the ‘normal’ response to VEGF is and how pregnancy normally augments that response at the receptor and post-receptor level. It is therefore vital that we clarify the specific points of cell signaling that discriminate eNOS activation at the level of uterine artery endothelium itself and understand how it is potentiated in pregnancy. The UAEC model gives us that opportunity.
In several previous studies we have shown that one important mechanism by which the uterine artery acquires altered function is through the reprogramming of cell signaling at the level of the endothelium in order to achieve a potentiated vasodilator response to a number of different agonists. Of note, responses to several G-protein coupled receptors and growth factor receptors in UAEC are altered [
16-
18], suggesting changes have occurred at the
post-receptor level. Responses to ATP are perhaps the best characterized in UAEC to date. We have previously shown that responses to ATP appear to couple to eNOS activation in a manner predominantly mediated by a P2Y2 receptor mediated Ca
2+-sensitive mechanism [
16-
20] and to a lesser extent by a Ca
2+-independent, wortmannin-sensitive but LY294002-insensitive mechanism [
15]. ATP can also stimulate the MEK/ERK-1/2 pathway in a manner potentiated by pregnancy, but this is not necessary for eNOS activation and may even exert a mildly inhibitory influence [
15], perhaps through direct phosphorylation of an ERK consensus sequence on eNOS at position Thr-97 [
39]. Another surprise, and a unique feature of UAEC compared to other endothelial models [
10,
12-
14], is that Akt is
not a mediator of eNOS activation. Even expression of constitutively active Akt failed to stimulate eNOS activity in UAEC and did not overcome the inhibitory effect of wortmannin, either alone or in the presence of ATP [
15].
Our studies herein focused upon VEGF action and extend our previous finding that VEGFR-1 and VEGFR-2 are both expressed in UAEC, and further determine that the neuropilin-1 receptor is undetectable in UAEC. Furthermore, UAEC derived from pregnant ewes do not show altered levels of VEGFR-1 and VEGFR-2 receptor protein expression relative to those from nonpregnant ewes. Given also that UAEC from NP and P ewes utilized in these studies at passage 4 have similar levels of eNOS protein [
16], we must conclude that enhanced cell responses in P-UAEC in response to VEGF
165 compared to NP-UAEC are due to altered post-receptor signaling rather than receptor levels, and that at least some of the signaling pathways that are enhanced in P-UAEC are similar to those enhanced in response to ATP [
15]. Comparing the effects of VEGF
165 with that of VEGFR-1-selective PlGF-1 show clearly that PlGF can elicit a small eNOS activation in P-UAEC alone, but VEGF
165 is by far the most effective activator of eNOS in NP- and P-UAEC. This combined with the inhibitory action of the VEGFR-2 kinase inhibitor on eNOS activity in both NP- and P-UAEC suggests that VEGFR-2 has a predominant role in the eNOS activation process in response to VEGF
165. Further examination of the effects of the VEGFR-2-selective isoform VEGF-E confirms that activation of VEGFR-2 alone is capable of leading to eNOS activation; and the lack of synergy with the combination of a submaximal dose of VEGF-E with PlGF suggests co-activation of VEGFR-1 is not necessary for the maximal response to the VEGFR-2 selective agonist. Nonetheless, VEGF
165 is not VEGFR-2 selective
in vivo, and our other data suggests that a role for VEGFR-1 in response to VEGF
165 cannot be ignored. The fact we did see some small degree of eNOS activation in response to PlGF in P-UAEC confirms PlGF does activate the VEGFR-1 receptor and can contribute to eNOS activation, and the fact this is not seen in NP-UAEC confirms VEGFR-1 function/coupling may change in pregnancy. Indeed other subtle differences in the dose-dependency of inhibition of VEGF
165-stimulated activation by the kinase inhibitor allude to a subtle change between the NP and P state. This dose-dependency of the inhibitor in the P-UAEC is consistent with the literature for this compound, whereas that in NP-UAEC is somewhat shifted to the right. It is interesting to note that at doses of VEGFR inhibitor of 0.1 uM and greater, the response of P-UAEC, expressed as fold of control, was similar to NP-UAEC. A change in VEGFR-2 receptor dimerization or interaction with other proteins including VEGFR-1 is a possible explanation for this response difference that will require further study.
It is clear from studies of other endothelial cell models that VEGFR-2 is capable of coupling to the MEK/ERK-1/2 pathway [
27] which, given our implication of VEGFR-2 in eNOS activation in UAEC, begs the question of whether ERK-1/2 activation mediates eNOS activation in UAEC. While the ability of both VEGF
165 and VEGF-E (but not PlGF) to robustly activate both eNOS and ERK-1/2 in NP-and P-UAEC may imply that activation of eNOS by VEGF
165 requires the ERK-1/2 pathway, further studies clearly refute that. Although the VEGFR-2 kinase inhibitor blocks eNOS activation by VEGF
165 in both NP- and P-UAEC, it has no effect on ERK-1/2 in either NP- or P-UAEC. In addition, the agent U0126, which blocks ERK-1/2 phosphorylation, fails to inhibit eNOS activation and indeed mildly potentiates it to similar levels in both NP- and P-UAEC. Combined, these data suggest that although ERK-1/2 and eNOS activation are mediated by the same receptor, the VEGFR-2 signaling events leading to ERK-1/2 activation and to eNOS activation are distinct. While the exact nature of these distinct receptor-mediated events requires further study, it is clear that activation of ERK-1/2 by VEGFR-2 is not sufficient to explain activation of eNOS, so further signaling pathways responsible for eNOS activation need to be considered, along with their potential activation in pregnancy. Interestingly, studies using site-directed mutagenesis of VEGFR-2 have already suggested the autophosphorylation site Tyr-801 is necessary for eNOS activation in bovine aortic endothelial cells [
14], yet it is not the same as the autophosphorylation sites commonly associated with ERK-1/2 activation or indeed PLC-γ recruitment [
40]. Such studies would have predicted, since both sites are autophosphorylation sites on VEGFR-2, that we should have seen equal inhibition of eNOS and ERK-1/2 responses by the VEGFR-2 kinase inhibitor. Certainly the dose dependency for the inhibition of eNOS in P-UAEC was exactly as expected and in NP-UAEC was only slightly shifted, so it is reasonable to assume the compound was indeed inhibiting autophosphorylation of VEGFR-2. The fact we did not see similar inhibition of VEGFR-2 mediated ERK-1/2 activation suggests that while ERK-1/2 activation is coupled to VEGR-2, it may not be through the ‘traditional’ recruitment of PLC-γ and/or other adaptor proteins. Clearly such possibilities warrant further consideration in this most unusual cell model.
Others [
13] have suggested VEGFR-1 couples to eNOS activation in HUVEC via the PI3 kinase/Akt pathway, yet our studies herein suggest no such coupling of the VEGF
165 response to the Akt pathway in UAEC, and this is consistent with our former report for no clear role for Akt in response to ATP [
15].We also see no clear requirement for Ser-1179 phosphorylation in the activation of eNOS in response to VEGF, consistent again with the response to ATP [
15]; the lack of these responses reinforce the uniqueness of the UAEC model. The PI3-kinase inhibitor LY294002 is ineffective in substantially blocking eNOS activation in response to VEGF, and we confirmed that the inhibitor did indeed lower basal phosphorylated Akt levels in the cell, with no parallel effect seen on the ERK-1/2 pathway until used at much higher doses (ERK-1 inhibited at less specific dose of 100 uM; data not shown). The intriguing finding, as previously observed for responses to ATP [
15], was that another widely used PI3-kinase inhibitor, wortmannin, was an effective inhibitor of eNOS activation and actually could fully inhibit the response to VEGF
165 in both NP- and P-UAEC. A discrepancy in action between LY294002 and wortmannin on various cell responses has previously been reported in many other cell systems [
41-
44]. The extent of inhibition by wortmannin in UAEC was greater for the response to VEGF
165 than was seen previously for ATP. The question that immediately arises is what is the true target for wortmannin? Clearly it is not acting by preventing Akt phosphorylation and associated activation. Also, wortmannin did not affect VEGF-stimulated ERK-1/2 activity (data not shown). Although both wortmannin and LY294002 are both known reported inhibitors of PI3-kinase (phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase), we must ask if this kinase is the real target in UAEC. In view of the dose dependency of the wortmannin effects observed, an unidentified target of wortmannin is possible, as wortmannin has been reported to alter several pathways that are PI3-kinase-independent [
42,
43,
45,
46]. Alternatively, since the known mechanisms of action of these two drugs to inhibit PI3-kinase are different, it also follows that an alternate, wortmannin-sensitive, LY294002-insensitive isoform of PI-3 kinase may be involved in eNOS activation and may mediate this effect independently of the Akt pathway. Indeed, the class II PI-3 kinase β isoform, which demonstrates sensitivity to wortmannin and resistance to LY294002 [
47,
48], is a downstream target of activated growth factor receptors [
49]. Our data herein suggests whatever the target, it is clearly important in UAEC to eNOS activation and its function may be considerably enhanced by pregnancy. It is interesting to note that the above-mentioned autophosphorylated residue Tyr-801 on VEGFR-2 necessary for eNOS activation in bovine aortic endothelial cells has been reported to signal through the PI3-kinase pathway independently of PLCγ. [
14]. Further studies will be necessary to determine if this residue is in fact playing a pregnancy-enhanced role in UAEC to directly or indirectly recruit specific wortmannin-sensitive isoforms of the PI3-kinase family that signal independently of Akt.
A final ongoing question in the area of regulation of eNOS activity in general and pregnancy enhancement of this response in UAEC in particular is the phosphorylation not only of position Ser-1179, but of other sites on eNOS and their relationship to NOS activity. A number of former studies in UAEC have agreed that in response to ATP, eNOS phosphorylation occurs at positions Ser-1179, Ser-617, and Ser-635, and these events are further enhanced in P-UAEC [
15,
28], In contrast, phosphorylation of position Thr-497 is largely unaffected by ATP and not enhanced in P-UAEC. We have also found in UAEC, as well as in the ovine eNOS cDNA as studied by site-directed mutagenesis, that there is no clear relationship between any one or any pair of sites and eNOS activation [
15,
28]. It is possible, and even highly likely, that the influence of such sites on activity is simply indirect through altering the surface charge in general, or by targeting the protein to different locations and/or coactivators and so making activation possible. In the case of ATP stimulation, this lack of a key role for phosphorylation is understandable in view of the additional substantial and pregnancy-enhanced elevation of intracellular Ca
2+, which is another known activator of eNOS [
15,
17-
20]. However, VEGF does not bring about such a generalized and substantial elevation of Ca
2+ [
16-
18] and, consistent with this, wortmannin is able to only partially inhibit the eNOS activation response to ATP, but more completely inhibit the response to VEGF. In view of the potential differences, we have examined the effects of VEGF on eNOS phosphorylation. While PlGF has no effect on phosphorylation of these sites, we find that time-dependent changes in phosphorylation of Ser-1179, Ser-617, and Ser-635 are indeed observed. Nonetheless, there is not so clear a difference between the effects of VEGF
165 on eNOS phosphorylation in NP- vs P-UAEC in contrast to that previously observed in response to ATP [
15,
28]. Most interesting of all, however, is the finding that wortmannin, which so effectively inhibits VEGF-stimulated eNOS activity in a dose-dependent manner, only shows comparable dose-dependent inhibition of the Ser-617 site in P-UAEC. A causal link between phosphorylation and activity is therefore possible, but is not clearly established and will require further confirmation.
In summary, we have investigated in detail the potential role for VEGFR-1 and VEGFR-2 in mediating activation of eNOS in UAEC and its enhancement by pregnancy. The relative weakness of PlGF-1 in eliciting an eNOS response in P-UAEC, combined with the effectiveness of the VEGFR-2 kinase inhibitor to block VEGF165 stimulated eNOS activation in both NP-and P-UAEC, suggests any positive effect of VEGF165 on activation is largely mediated via the VEGFR-2 subclass, which is further confirmed by the stimulatory effect of VEGF-E. While VEGFR-2 may play the dominant role in eNOS activation, a less critical modulatory role of VEGFR-1 may occur in pregnancy and certainly cannot be ruled out by the current studies. There is no evidence that VEGF165 couples to Akt phosphorylation as a means of controlling eNOS activity, and this is consistent with a lack of any strong evidence for activation via robust phosphorylation at position Ser-1179 in NP- or P-UAEC. Although VEGFR-2 appears to couple to the MEK/ERK-1/2 signaling pathway, MEK/ERK-1/2 is not the mediator of eNOS activation, and the independent mechanism by which VEGFR-2 activates the MEK/ERK-1/2 pathway requires further study. Our finding herein that VEGF165 activation of eNOS can also be completely inhibited by wortmannin but not LY294002 implies a downstream kinase, possibly a wortmannin-selective PI3-kinase, is acting between the VEGFR-2 kinase and eNOS itself, but functions independently of Akt. A link between eNOS activation and eNOS phosphorylation at position 617 is possible, but by no means proven.
In conclusion, we have now substantially clarified the nature of the VEGF receptors that are present in UAEC and how they couple VEGF
165 stimulation to eNOS activation. Clearly both VEGFR-1 and VEGFR-2 are present, yet VEGFR-2 plays the major role in activation of eNOS in a manner that is distinct from activation of ERK-1/2. While the involvement of VEGFR-2 in eNOS activation is not unique to UAEC, the possible pregnancy-induced role of VEGFR-1 in modulating VEGFR-2 action, and the distinctly different signaling events that mediate eNOS activation in UAEC continue to contrast the findings of studies in other endothelial cell models. Furthermore, our findings for VEGF stimulation of eNOS activity agree with our own recent reports for ATP stimulation, that eNOS activation is not mediated solely through the phosphorylation of a single or pair of eNOS phosphorylation sites [
15,
28]. While the former response to ATP may be in large part due to P2Y2 receptor mediated Ca
2+ mobilization secondary to activation of PLC-β3, this is certainly not the case for responses to VEGF acting through its distinctly different class of receptors. In addition, the effects of wortmannin vs LY294002 on responses to VEGF and ATP suggest an as yet unknown regulatory mechanism plays a major role in controlling eNOS, and changes in this signaling pathway may be the basis of pregnancy-enhanced eNOS activation in UAEC. An understanding of this mechanism may well provide an ability to restore normal vascular function necessary for optimal fetal growth and development that is otherwise impaired in conditions such as preeclampsia. Knowledge of such a mechanism may also have direct relevance to the broader area of vascular function and provide novel therapeutic targets to resist the effects of aging on cardiovascular function in both men and women.