An endothelial SOX18-mevalonate pathway axis enables repurposing of statins for infantile hemangioma.

Abstract

Infantile hemangioma (IH) is the most common tumor in children and a paradigm for pathological vasculogenesis, angiogenesis, and regression. Propranolol, the mainstay of treatment, inhibits IH vessel formation via a β-adrenergic receptor-independent off-target effect of its R(+) enantiomer on endothelial SOX18 - a member of the SOX (SRY-related HMG-box) family of transcription factors. Transcriptomic profiling of patient-derived hemangioma stem cells uncovered the mevalonate pathway (MVP) as a target of R(+) propranolol. Loss and gain of function of SOX18 confirmed it is both necessary and sufficient for R(+) propranolol suppression of the MVP, including regulation of sterol regulatory element-binding protein 2 (SREBP2) and the rate-limiting enzyme HMG-CoA reductase (HMGCR). A biological relevance of the endothelial SOX18-MVP axis in IH patient tissue was demonstrated by nuclear colocalization of SOX18 and SREBP2. Functional validation in a preclinical IH xenograft model revealed that statins - competitive inhibitors of HMGCR - efficiently suppress IH vessel formation. We propose an endothelial SOX18-MVP axis as a central regulator of IH pathogenesis and suggest statin repurposing to treat IH. The pleiotropic effects of R(+) propranolol and statins along the SOX18-MVP axis to disable an endothelial cell-specific program may have therapeutic implications for other vascular disease entities involving pathological vasculogenesis and angiogenesis.

Overview publication

TitleAn endothelial SOX18-mevalonate pathway axis enables repurposing of statins for infantile hemangioma.
Date2025-02-25
Issue nameThe Journal of clinical investigation
Issue numberv135.7
DOI10.1172/JCI179782
PubMed39998898
AuthorsHolm A, Graus MS, Wylie-Sears J, Tan JWH, Alvarez-Harmon M, Borgelt L, Nasim S, Chung L, Jain A, Sun M, Sun L, Brouillard P, Lekwuttikarn R, Qi Y, Teng J, Vikkula M, Kozakewich H, Mulliken JB, Francois M & Bischoff J
KeywordsAngiogenesis, Cholesterol, Endothelial cells, Transcription, Vascular biology
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