Formin homology domain–containing protein 1 regulates smooth muscle cell phenotype

DP Staus, AL Blaker, MD Medlin… - … , and vascular biology, 2011 - ahajournals.org
DP Staus, AL Blaker, MD Medlin, JM Taylor, CP Mack
Arteriosclerosis, thrombosis, and vascular biology, 2011ahajournals.org
Objective—Our goal was to test whether formin homology protein 1 (FHOD1) plays a
significant role in the regulation of smooth muscle cell (SMC) differentiation and, if so,
whether Rho kinase (ROCK)–dependent phosphorylation in the diaphanous autoinhibitory
domain is an important signaling mechanism that controls FHOD1 activity in SMC. Methods
and Results—FHOD1 is highly expressed in aortic SMCs and in tissues with a significant
SMC component. Exogenous expression of constitutively active FHOD1, but not wild-type …
Objective
Our goal was to test whether formin homology protein 1 (FHOD1) plays a significant role in the regulation of smooth muscle cell (SMC) differentiation and, if so, whether Rho kinase (ROCK)–dependent phosphorylation in the diaphanous autoinhibitory domain is an important signaling mechanism that controls FHOD1 activity in SMC.
Methods and Results
FHOD1 is highly expressed in aortic SMCs and in tissues with a significant SMC component. Exogenous expression of constitutively active FHOD1, but not wild-type, strongly activated SMC-specific gene expression in 10T1/2 cells. Treatment of SMC with the RhoA activator sphingosine-1-phosphate increased FHOD1 phosphorylation at Thr1141, and this effect was completely prevented by inhibition of ROCK with Y-27632. Phosphomimetic mutations to ROCK target residues enhanced FHOD1 activity, suggesting that phosphorylation interferes with FHOD1 autoinhibition. Importantly, knockdown of FHOD1 in SMC strongly inhibited sphingosine-1-phosphate–dependent increases in SMC differentiation marker gene expression and actin polymerization, suggesting that FHOD1 plays a major role in RhoA-dependent signaling in SMC.
Conclusion
Our results indicate that FHOD1 is a critical regulator of SMC phenotype and is regulated by ROCK-dependent phosphorylation. Thus, additional studies on the role of FHOD1 during development and the progression of cardiovascular disease will be important.
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