蕊心 周 / Southern University of Science and Technology
世瑜 郑 / Southern University of Science and Technology
薇 黄 / University of Cincinnati
留阳 蔡 / 南方科技大学
宇亮 冯 / Southern University of Science and Technology
Background: Diabetic vascular complications are driven by endothelial dysfunction, yet the role of 3D genome organization in this process is unknown. We sought to define the alterations in chromatin architecture in diabetic endothelium and identify the key regulators involved.
Methods: We generated a high-resolution 3D epigenomic atlas of diabetic endothelial cells from mouse models and human subjects using H3K27ac HiChIP, complemented by ChIP-seq, ATAC-seq, and RNA-seq. A human cohort was used to assess protein expression in diabetic versus non-diabetic endothelial cells. To identify JUNB-interacting proteins, we performed rapid immunoprecipitation mass spectrometry of endogenous proteins (RIME), with protein-protein interaction validated by co-immunoprecipitation. Functional validation was performed using in vitro, ex vivo, and in vivo approaches, including endothelial-specific knockdown in a diabetic hindlimb ischemia model.
Results: Multi-omics profiling revealed extensive enhancer reprogramming in diabetic endothelium, with AP-1 binding motifs being consistently and selectively enriched in downregulated enhancers across three distinct diabetic models. Analysis of a human cohort confirmed significantly reduced JUNB protein levels in diabetic endothelial cells. We identified widespread disruption of JUNB-anchored enhancer-promoter interactions, which underlies transcriptional repression of key endothelial genes. RIME and co-immunoprecipitation established the E3 ubiquitin ligase RBBP6 as a direct JUNB interactor that promotes its polyubiquitination and proteasomal degradation in response to hyperglycemia. Human cohort analysis further showed reciprocal elevation of RBBP6 in diabetic endothelial cells. Either JUNB overexpression or RBBP6 knockdown restored enhancer-promoter connectivity, reactivated vasoprotective transcriptional programs, and rescued endothelial function. Critically, endothelial-specific knockdown of Rbbp6 in diabetic mice restored endothelium-dependent vasorelaxation and improved perfusion recovery after hindlimb ischemia, independent of systemic glucose levels.
Conclusions: Our study unveils a novel mechanism whereby hyperglycemia induces enhancer reprogramming and disrupts endothelial 3D genome architecture through RBBP6-mediated degradation of JUNB. The RBBP6-JUNB axis is established as a crucial link between metabolic stress and epigenomic reprogramming in vascular disease, presenting a promising therapeutic target for diabetic vasculopathy.