| Literature DB >> 23076135 |
Suraj Kachgal1, Kimberly A Mace, Nancy J Boudreau.
Abstract
Homeobox genes represent a family of highly conserved transcription factors originally discovered to regulate organ patterning during development. More recently, several homeobox genes were shown to affect processes in adult tissue, including angiogenesis and wound healing. Whereas a subset of members of the Hox-family of homeobox genes activate growth and migration to promote angiogenesis or wound healing, other Hox genes function to restore or maintain quiescent, differentiated tissue function. Pathological tissue remodeling is linked to differential expression of activating or stabilizing Hox genes and dysregulation of Hox expression can contribute to disease progression. Studies aimed at understanding the role and regulation of Hox genes have provided insight into how these potent morphoregulatory genes can be applied to enhance tissue engineering or limit cancer progression.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23076135 PMCID: PMC3547888 DOI: 10.4161/cam.22164
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Adh Migr ISSN: 1933-6918 Impact factor: 3.405

Figure 1. Mammalian Hox clusters. Thirty-nine Hox genes are arranged into four distinct chromosomal loci. During human development Hox genes are activated in a 3′ to 5′ manner within each cluster, concomitant with the development of the anteroposterior axis; Hox gene activation is color-coded based approximately on anatomical location during development. Note the presence of two miRNA families (MIR10 and MIR196) within the Hox clusters, which target many Hox genes and may contribute to the posterior prevalence phenomenon.

Figure 2. Hox gene control of the angiogenic switch. Differential expression of Hox genes is key in transitioning between homeostasis and angiogenesis. During homeostasis, HOXA5 and HOXD10 upregulate anti-angiogenic cytokines and inhibit pro-angiogenic signals, thereby maintaining a quiescent endothelial phenotype. Tumor cells can initiate an angiogenic response as a result of a change in Hox gene expression. Loss of HOXA5 and HOXD10 expression (along with the upregulation of HOXB7 and HOXB9) leads to the secretion of pro-angiogenic and pro-inflammatory cytokines. Responsive ECs subsequently downregulate the expression of HOXD10 and upregulate the expression of HOXA3 and HOXD3, thereby assuming an invasive phenotype. Tumor-associated endothelium maintains this invasive phenotype, whereas normal angiogenesis is an ordered process that concludes with a closed capillary network. ECs undergoing capillary morphogenesis express HOXA9 and HOXB3 and are phenotypically distinct from their invasive counterparts.
Table 1. Homeobox activators/repressors of vascularization/wound healing
| Gene/ | Pro/Anti-vascularization/wound healing | Observation (expressed in) | Reference(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hox family genes | |||
| HOXA3 | Pro-Vasc. | • Knockout mice developed abnormally sized heart chambers | |
| Pro-WH | • Natively upregulated in keratinocytes within wound tissue. Enhances uPAR-mediated keratinocyte migration and accelerates wound closure in diabetic mice (dermal wound tissue) | ||
| HOXA5 | Anti-Vasc. | • Expressed in quiescent endothelium. Dowregulates | |
| HOXA9 | Pro-Vasc. | • Promotes EC migration and tube formation in culture through direct upregulation of | |
| Pro-WH | • Decreased expression in keloid fibroblasts associated with abnormal wound healing (dermal fibroblasts) | ||
| HOXB3 | Pro-Vasc. | • Increases expression of ephrin A1 and induces capillary morphogenesis in endothelial sprouts (ECs) | |
| HOXB5 | Pro-Vasc. | • Triggers differentiation of embryoid bodies into angioblasts through VEGFR2 transactivation (ESCs) | |
| HOXB7 | Pro-Vasc. | • Directly enhances expression of FGF2, VEGFA, IL8, CXCL1 and ANG2 (many tumor lines) | |
| HOXB9 | Pro-Vasc. | • Increased expression of VEGFA, FGF2, IL8 and ANGPTL2. Produced highly vascularized tumors which developed metastases (MCF10A breast epithelial cells) | |
| HOXB13 | Anti-WH | • Longer retention of fibrin clot, sustained inflammatory response and formation of large, irregular vasculature (dermal wound tissue) | |
| HOXC8 | Pro-WH | • Expression correlates with keratinocyte proliferation and migration, leading to wound epithelialization (keratinocytes) | |
| HOXD1 | Pro-Vasc. | • Directly increases β1 integrin expression, allowing formation of pro-angiogenic α5β1 integrin (ECs) | |
| HOXD3 | Pro-Vasc. | • Correlates with invasive phase of angiogenesis. Directly enhances expression of the α5 and β3. Indirectly increases uPA. Expressed in immature tumor vasculature (ECs) | |
| Pro-WH | • Increases angiogenesis and COL1A1 production, leading to accelerated wound closure (ECs, fibroblasts, keratinocytes) | ||
| HOXD8 | Pro-WH | • Upregulated in wounded fetal skin (fetal wound tissue) | |
| HOXD10 | Anti-Vasc. | • Expressed in quiescent endothelium. Overexpression inhibits angiogenic respone to FGF2 and VEGFA. Decreases expression of | |