FOXQ1 Regulates Brain Endothelial Mitochondrial Function by Orchestrating Calcium Signaling and Cristae Morphology.

FOXQ1 Regulates Brain Endothelial Mitochondrial Function by Orchestrating Calcium Signaling and Cristae Morphology.

Publication date: Aug 30, 2025

The blood-brain barrier (BBB) maintains brain homeostasis through specialized functions including tight junction formation and selective transport of brain endothelial cells (ECs). While ECs are generally thought to rely primarily on glycolysis for energy production, the transcriptional mechanisms underlying their metabolic specialization in the brain endothelium remain poorly understood, especially considering the brain’s extraordinary energy demands. Through comparative transcriptomic analysis, it is demonstrated that brain endothelial cells are enriched for mitochondrial function genes, with forkhead box protein 1 (FOXQ1) being selectively expressed in cerebral vasculature. Conditional knockout of Foxq1 in endothelial cells results in severe mitochondrial dysfunction, including disrupted cristae morphology, reduced oxygen consumption, and impaired adenosine triphosphate (ATP) production. Mechanistically, FOXQ1 directly regulates two key pathways: calcium signaling through huntingtin-associated protein (HAP1)-mediated endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-mitochondrial calcium transfer, and mitochondrial structural integrity via AarF domain-containing protein kinase 1 (ADCK1)-dependent cristae organization. These findings reveal that brain endothelial cells rely on oxidative phosphorylation rather than glycolysis alone, challenging the prevailing metabolic paradigm for endothelial cells. This work establishes FOXQ1 as an important regulator of brain endothelial metabolism and provides new insights into the molecular basis of cerebrovascular specialization, with implications for understanding vascular dysfunction in neurological diseases.

Concepts Keywords
Atp brain endothelial cells
Calcium calcium signaling
Cerebrovascular cristae organization
Foxq1 FOXQ1
Homeostasis mitochondrial metabolism

Semantics

Type Source Name
pathway REACTOME Glycolysis
disease MESH mitochondrial dysfunction
drug DRUGBANK Oxygen
drug DRUGBANK ATP
drug DRUGBANK Calcium
pathway KEGG Oxidative phosphorylation
pathway REACTOME Metabolism

Original Article

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