Smooth muscle overexpression of PGC1α attenuates atherosclerosis in rabbits
This work is essential for the following reasons: 1. As the first and one of the best animal models for investigating AS, the rabbit model is a better overall approximation to humans. However, to date, only 22 lines of Tg rabbits have been established to study CVD due to the relative difficulty of genetically manipulating and breeding rabbits compared with mice. Most of these exogenous genes were either systemically or specifically expressed in rabbit liver cells and directly participated in lipoprotein metabolism, for example, apolipoproteins and their associated enzymes. Although many lipid metabolism related factors have been expressed in rabbit livers and macrophages, models with artery-specific overexpression of genes are lacking. By generating transgenic rabbits that expressed PGC1α under the control of a minimal SM22 promoter, whose activity was constitutive in arterial SMCs. Zhang's group found that after HCD feeding, although Tg rabbits developed hypercholesterolemia similar to that in their non-Tg littermates, the mean aortic lesion size in Tg rabbits was markedly reduced. This finding is consistent with previous observations in vitro studies in cultured VSMCs, indicating a direct atheroprotective role of PGC1α in arterial VSMCs. 2. As a powerful orchestrator of energy metabolism, PGC1α is highly expressed in energy demanding tissues, such as brown fat, liver, brain, and muscles. The function of PGC1α is less studied in VSMCs, the ultimate effectors of vasomotion and a major cell type present at all stages of AS than in skeletal muscle and cardiac muscle cells. Although previous in vitro studies showed that PGC1α can inhibit pathological factor-induced VSMC proliferation and senescence, increased local PGC1α expression in AS has not been conclusively demonstrated in vivo. In the present study, based on RNA-seq analysis and a set of experimental assays of the aortic media from HCD-fed control and Tg rabbits, they found that the PGC1α level was positively associated with the VSMC-restricted contractile gene expressions, but negatively correlated with the atherogenic synthetic phenotype-related features of VSMCs, such as increased expression of proinflammatory factors and MMPs, enhanced ROS production and senescence, and elevated VSMC proliferation. These in vivo observations were also confirmed in cultured VSMCs, hence revealing the novel role of PGC1α in preserving the beneficial contractile phenotype of VSMCs and bolstering its antiatherogenic function. 3. Their data indicated a potential atheroprotective role of PGC1α in clinical atherosclerotic samples, yet further studies with more accurate lineage identification techniques are needed to address this possibility, and regulating PGC1α itself or increasing the level of PGC1α in VSMCs might be feasible therapeutic strategies for atherosclerosis.
INFORMATION:
The researchers of this project include Zhe Wei; Hoshun Chong; Qixia, Jiang; Yuhang Tang; Jinhong Xu; Haoquan Wang; Yanteng Shi; Le Cui; Jing Li; Yujing Zhang; Yunxing Xue; Jutang Li; George Liu; Xi Chen; Dongjin Wang; Chen-Yu Zhang ; Xiaohong Jiang
This work was supported by grants from the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 31972912, 82030026,81670437, 31771666, 31741066), the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (No. 020814380087, 020814380094, 0208131230).
Wei et al.: "Smooth Muscle Overexpression of PGC1α Attenuates Atherosclerosis in Rabbits" published on Circulation Research, DOI: 10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.120.317705
Author contact: Xiaohong Jiang and Chen-Yu Zhang (Nanjing Drum Tower Hospital Center of Molecular Diagnostic and Therapy, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences Research Unit of Extracellular RNA, State Key Laboratory of Pharmaceutical Biotechnology, Jiangsu Engineering Research Center for MicroRNA Biology and Biotechnology, NJU Advanced Institute of Life Sciences (NAILS), Institute of Artificial Intelligence Biomedicine, School of Life Sciences, Nanjing University, Nanjing, Jiangsu, China) Tel: +86-25-89680245; E-mail: xiaohongjiang@nju.edu.cn; cyzhang@nju.edu.cn