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Rapamycin improves TIE2-mutated venous malformation in murine model and human subjects
Elisa Boscolo, … , Joyce Bischoff, Laurence M. Boon
Elisa Boscolo, … , Joyce Bischoff, Laurence M. Boon
Published August 10, 2015
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2015;125(9):3491-3504. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI76004.
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Research Article Genetics

Rapamycin improves TIE2-mutated venous malformation in murine model and human subjects

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Abstract

Venous malformations (VMs) are composed of ectatic veins with scarce smooth muscle cell coverage. Activating mutations in the endothelial cell tyrosine kinase receptor TIE2 are a common cause of these lesions. VMs cause deformity, pain, and local intravascular coagulopathy, and they expand with time. Targeted pharmacological therapies are not available for this condition. Here, we generated a model of VMs by injecting HUVECs expressing the most frequent VM-causing TIE2 mutation, TIE2-L914F, into immune-deficient mice. TIE2-L914F–expressing HUVECs formed VMs with ectatic blood-filled channels that enlarged over time. We tested both rapamycin and a TIE2 tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TIE2-TKI) for their effects on murine VM expansion and for their ability to inhibit mutant TIE2 signaling. Rapamycin prevented VM growth, while TIE2-TKI had no effect. In cultured TIE2-L914F–expressing HUVECs, rapamycin effectively reduced mutant TIE2-induced AKT signaling and, though TIE2-TKI did target the WT receptor, it only weakly suppressed mutant-induced AKT signaling. In a prospective clinical pilot study, we analyzed the effects of rapamycin in 6 patients with difficult–to-treat venous anomalies. Rapamycin reduced pain, bleeding, lesion size, functional and esthetic impairment, and intravascular coagulopathy. This study provides a VM model that allows evaluation of potential therapeutic strategies and demonstrates that rapamycin provides clinical improvement in patients with venous malformation.

Authors

Elisa Boscolo, Nisha Limaye, Lan Huang, Kyu-Tae Kang, Julie Soblet, Melanie Uebelhoer, Antonella Mendola, Marjut Natynki, Emmanuel Seront, Sophie Dupont, Jennifer Hammer, Catherine Legrand, Carlo Brugnara, Lauri Eklund, Miikka Vikkula, Joyce Bischoff, Laurence M. Boon

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Figure 5

TIE2-TKI and rapamycin effects on signaling pathways downstream of TIE2 in HUVEC-TIE2-WT and HUVEC-TIE2-L914F.

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TIE2-TKI and rapamycin effects on signaling pathways downstream of TIE2 ...
(A) Immunoblot analysis of HUVEC-TIE2-WT and TIE2-L914F treated for 48 hours with TIE2-TKI (5 μM), DMSO, or rapamycin (15 nM). Two protein samples loaded from 2 different cell treatment sets. Tubulin served as loading control. (B) Densitometric analysis of p-TIE2, p-AKT473, p-AKT308, p-STAT1, p-ERK, p-mTOR, and p–4E-BP1 Western blot bands relative to total protein, TIE2, AKT, STAT1, ERK, mTOR, and 4E-BP1, respectively. Data expressed as mean ± SD, t test (n = 4, 2 independent experiments). Data are normalized to DMOS-treated HUVEC-TIE2-WT (dashed lines).

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ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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