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Specific Oxylipins Enhance Vertebrate Hematopoiesis via the Receptor GPR132

Authors :
Shelby E. Redfield
Iris T. Chan
Pulin Li
Megan C. Blair
Anne L. Robertson
Madeleine L. Daily
Nan Chiang
Paul C. Norris
Leonard I. Zon
Song Yang
Emma R. Stillman
Jamie L. Lahvic
Michelle Ammerman
Michael E. Chase
Yi Zhou
Constantina Christodoulou
Julie R. Perlin
Olivia Weis
Mona Chatrizeh
Charles N. Serhan
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2018.

Abstract

Epoxyeicosatrienoic acids (EETs) are endogenous lipid signaling molecules with cardioprotective and vasodilatory actions. We recently showed that exogenous addition of 11,12-EET enhances hematopoietic induction and engraftment in mice and zebrafish. EETs are known to signal via a G-protein coupled receptor(s), and significant research supports the existence of a specific high-affinity receptor. Identification of a hematopoietic specific EET receptor would enable genetic interrogation of the EET signaling pathway and perhaps clinical use of this molecule. We developed a bioinformatic approach to identify the EET receptor based on the expression of GPCRs in cell lines with differential responses to EETs. We found 10 candidate EET receptors that are commonly expressed in three EET-responsive human cell lines, but not expressed in an EET-unresponsive line. Of these candidates, only GPR132 showed EET-responsivenessin vitrousing a luminescence-based assay for β-arrestin recruitment. Knockdown of zebrafishgpr132bprevented EET-induced hematopoiesis, and marrow from GPR132 knockout mice showed decreased long-term engraftment capability. In contrast to the putative high-affinity EET receptor, GPR132 is reported to have affinity for additional fatty acidsin vitro,and we found that these same fatty acids enhance hematopoietic stem cell specification in the zebrafish. We conducted structure-activity relationship analyses using bothin vitroandin vivoassays on diverse medium chain fatty acids. Certain oxygenated, unsaturated free fatty acids showed high activation of GPR132, while unoxygenated or saturated fatty acids had lower activity. Absence of the carboxylic acid moiety prevented activity, suggesting that this moiety is required for receptor activation. GPR132 responds to a select panel of polyunsaturated, oxygenated fatty acids to enhance both embryonic and adult hematopoiesis.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....06f38bfc41bfc78f3caf4c66b4b692f9
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/313403