Objective
To investigate the functional role of the miR-15b/16 in vascular smooth muscle phenotypic modulation.
Approach and Results
We found that miR-15b/16 is the one of most abundant microRNAs expressed in contractile vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs). However, when contractile VSMCs convert to a synthetic phenotype miR-15b/16 expression is significantly reduced. Knocking-down endogenous miR-15b/16 in VSMCs attenuates smooth muscle-specific gene expression but promotes VSMC proliferation and migration. Conversely, over-expression of miR-15b/16 promotes smooth muscle contractile gene expression while attenuating VSMC migration and proliferation. Consistent with this, over-expression of miR-15b/16 in a rat carotid balloon injury model markedly attenuates injury-induced smooth muscle de-differentiation and neointima formation. Mechanistically, we identified the potent oncoprotein yes-associated protein (YAP) as a downstream target of miR-15b/16 in VSMCs. Reporter assays validated that miR-15b/16 targets YAP’s 3′-untranslated region. Moreover, overexpression of miR-15b/16 significantly represses YAP expression, whereas conversely, depletion of endogenous miR-15b/16 results in up-regulation of YAP expression.
Conclusions
These results indicate that miR-15b/16 plays a critical role in smooth muscle phenotypic modulation at least partly through targeting YAP. Restoring expression of miR-15b/16 would be a potential therapeutic approach for treatment of proliferative vascular diseases.