Ras-related protein 2 limits vascular smooth muscle cell phenotypic switching and abdominal aortic aneurysm development

Shanshan, Luo, Jiyu, Chen, Ke, Zhong, Xiaoqi, Wu, Rui, Li, Tianyu, Song, Zhongxu, Sun, Shixiu, Sun, Xinlong, Tang, Yan, Zhang, Zhi Ren, Zhang, Bo, Yu, Jinwei, Tian, Li, Li, Aihua, Gu, Feng, Chen, Dongjin, Wang, Jun, Pu, Yi, Han, Liping, Xie, Yong, Ji

Nature Communications |

Abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) and the attendant catastrophic event of rupture remain a leading cause of death. Germline mutation of RRAS2 cause Noonan Syndrome, yet little is known about its function in AAA pathogenesis. Integrated analysis of RNA-seq data revealed RRAS2 a potential regulator of AAA. Its mRNA and protein levels reduced in abdominal aorta of AAA patients and AAA mice. Mice with SMCs-specific knockout of Rras2 were more vulnerable to Ang II and porcine pancreatic elastase-induced AAA, while overexpression of Rras2 in SMCs inhibited AAA progression. Maternally expressed gene 3 (MEG3) prevented RRAS2 mRNA degradation through binding with ELAV-like protein 1 (ELAVL1/HuR). Mechanistically, loss of R-Ras2 reduces phosphorylation, nuclear translocation, and transcriptional activity of general transcription factor 2I (GTF2-I/TFII-I) to reduce contractile-related genes expression in a MET tyrosine kinase-dependent manner. Here, we show an essential role of R-Ras2 in preserving VSMCs homeostasis and provide potential therapeutic targets for AAA.