Large vessel vasculitides (LVV), such as giant cell arteritis (GCA) cause blindness, stroke, aortic arch syndrome, aortic aneurysm, hypertension and myocardial insufficiency. In an aging population the number of patients requiring chronic management for LVV has been steadily rising, while the therapeutic armamentarium has remained strictly limited to high-dose corticosteroids. The last decade has seen exciting progress in implicating the innate and adaptive immune system in the immunopathogenesis of LVV. However, there is a critical gap in our knowledge why the disease targets the aorta and its major branches and how immuno- stromal communications in the arterial wall initiate and promote vasculitis. The pathogenic immune response has a signature of antigen-induced clonal expansion, but we have recently seen that costimulatory signals deriving from resident cells in the tissue niche are equally important in driving tissue-damaging immunity. GCA arteries express abundant levels of NOTCH receptors and ligands, providing a molecular platform for superb cell-to-cell communication. Blocking of NOTCH signaling effectively inhibits vasculitis. CD4 T cells from GCA patients constitutively express NOTCH1 receptor, enabling them to interact with NOTCH ligand expressing vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMC) and endothelial cells (EC). This application is designed to uncover how the Notch pathway participates in immuno-endothelial and immuno-stromal communications and how NOTCH- dependent signaling shapes vasculitogenic T cell responses and maladaptive VSMC and EC behavior. The project builds on a series of enabling resources; including a clinically phenotyped cohort of GCA patients; a novel 3-D model system of human arterial walls which permits assembly of custom-made vessels from stackable units populated with defined cell populations; and a humanized mouse model carrying inflamed human arteries. Access to Notch receptor and ligands can be blocked through ligand-competing antibodies/fusion proteins and cells can be rendered Notch signaling deficient by RNAi technology.
Specific Aim 1 examines on a mechanistic level how NOTCH ligands on VSMC and EC regulate effector functions of vasculitogenic CD4 T cells; modulate their growth, tissue invasion capacity and cytokine production.
Specific Aim 2 seeks to identify signaling networks that can be utilized to either suppress NOTCH1 expression or target NOTCH-dependent survival signals in pathogenic T cells. Small molecule inhibitors disrupting Notch-derived signals will be tested in the chimera model for their anti-vasculitic potential.
Specific Aim 3 is focused on the role of VSMC as signal-sending and signal-receiving cells and determines how NOTCH-NOTCH ligand interactions affect VSMC survival, migration, matrix production, contractility and ROS release.
Specific Aim 4 unravels the molecular mechanisms through which patient-derived CD4+NOTCH1+ T cells regulate the functional behavior of ECs and investigates how such T cells modulate EC proinflammatory functions, angiogenic capacity, adhesiveness and leakiness of the EC barrier.

Public Health Relevance

Large vessel vasculitis (giant cell arteritis) is a life-threatening disease of the aorta and its major branches which causes aortic aneurysms as well as vascular occlusions. The disease is initiated by the immune system but the blood vessel itself contributes to vascular damage. Because current therapies are limited to high-dose corticosteroids, this project seeks to understand how immune cells communicate with blood vessel cells and how blocking such communications can be exploited for novel therapeutic approaches.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01HL117913-03
Application #
8989148
Study Section
Vascular Cell and Molecular Biology Study Section (VCMB)
Program Officer
Mcdonald, Cheryl
Project Start
2014-01-06
Project End
2018-12-31
Budget Start
2016-01-01
Budget End
2016-12-31
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
2016
Total Cost
$395,369
Indirect Cost
$140,721
Name
Stanford University
Department
Internal Medicine/Medicine
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
009214214
City
Stanford
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
94304
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