Smooth muscle overexpression of PGC1α attenuates atherosclerosis in rabbits
2021-06-24
(Press-News.org) In a new study published in Circulation Research, Chen-Yu Zhang and Xiaohong Jiang's group from Nanjing University and Dongjin Wang's group from Nanjing Drum Tower Hospital reported a critical role of PGC1α in maintaining the contractile phenotype of vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) and highlighted the therapeutic potential of PGC1α for atherosclerosis.
The traditional view holds that aberrant proliferation of VSMCs promotes plaque formation after vessel injury and inflammation, whereas the presence of VSMCs in the fibrous cap of the plaque is beneficial. Although it has long been assumed that these seemingly contradictory functions of VSMCs during atherosclerosis arise from their remarkable plasticity, direct evidence that VSMCs undergo phenotypic switching during atherogenesis in vivo has only been proven recently by rigorous lineage tracing studies. These studies showed that the contribution of VSMCs to atherosclerosis has been greatly underestimated. Despite the importance of VSMC phenotypic modulation in lesion pathogenesis and plaque composition, the underlying molecular mechanisms remain to be elucidated.
Among the different animal models that have been used to study atherosclerosis, rabbits not only have provided many insights into the pathogenesis of human AS but also have contributed greatly to translational research. Rodents, such as mice and rats, are quite resistant to atherosclerosis due to high levels of HDL in circulation. Like humans but unlike rodents, rabbits are considered LDL mammals, which are sensitive to dietary cholesterol and spontaneously develop AS. However, due largely to the relative ease of their genetic manipulation and breeding, compared with those of rabbits, mice--such as ApoE-/- and LDLR-/- mice--are still the most wildly used laboratory models. However, owing to their unique features of lipoprotein metabolism, which are pathophysiologically more similar to those of primates than those of rodents, transgenic rabbits have still been used during the past decades to study humans atherosclerosis in order to bridge the gaps between mice and humans; thus, rabbits are an indispensable model for studying human atherosclerosis.
Although aberrant expression of PGC1α, a master regulator of mitochondrial biogenesis, has been shown to be associated with cardiovascular diseases, the role of PGC1α overexpression in VSMCs in the formation of atherosclerotic lesions has not been elucidated. In the current study, Wei et al. generated Tg rabbits with SMC-specific PGC1α overexpression and showed that overexpression of PGC1α in VSMCs significantly ameliorated high cholesterol diet-induced atherosclerotic plaque formation. After feeding cholesterol rich diet, the VSMCs from Tg rabbits exhibited a more contractile phenotype than their non-Tg littermates, which resulted in decreased macrophage infiltration, vascular inflammation, ROS production, vascular senescence, and VSMC proliferation. In addition, similar vasoprotective effects were observed in cultured human aortic SMCs and clinical samples. Collectively, their findings demonstrate a beneficial role for PGC1α in modulating VSMC phenotype and the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis.
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
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2021-06-24
Somnambulism - otherwise known as sleepwalking - is a phenomenon which has fascinated the public and neurologists for decades, but a lot of what causes it remains a mystery.
Affecting up to 4% of adults, sleepwalking is a non-rapid-eye movement (NREM) sleep parasomnia that not only gives someone a poor night's sleep, but also puts them at serious risk of injury and, in some cases, lead to unintended violence against others.
The following day can also prove challenging as the sleepwalker will feel unrested and a strong desire to fall asleep (somnolence).
Unfortunately ...
2021-06-24
Pioneering research, led by a team from Trinity College Dublin and the Marine Research Institute of the Spanish Research Council (IIM-CSIC) in Vigo (Galicia, Spain), suggests "subterranean estuaries" may be critical in managing sustainable fishing and aquaculture - two growing industries of global importance.
Subterranean estuaries are analogous to surface water estuaries, where freshwater flowing out to sea mixes with seawater, but are instead located underground, invisible to the naked eye. Yet the newly published research shows these hidden features are very important in the ecology of coastal systems and in filtering pollutants - some of which ...
2021-06-24
The cultivated planet is withstanding record-breaking pressure to ensure food security. To meet the rising demand of food, energy, and fiber, a 70%-100% increase in crop commodities will be needed globally by 2050. However, rapid urbanization and industrialization have caused dramatic loss of high-quality cropland and hence threatened food security. To stabilize cropland area, cropland expansion to marginal lands has become a widespread phenomenon worldwide. This study developed a systems framework to represent the trade-off among crop yield, production, and environmental cost, according to the competitive relationship of production, settlement, and ecological space and the link of "land - food - environment - policy". Using China as a case study, the authors ...
2021-06-24
The rarity of these syndromes, caused by damage to a gene named HUWE1, means very few children are affected. Of course, the low absolute numbers are little consolation for children who are born with a severe intellectual disability as a result of gene mutation.
Many affected children have distinctive facial features, some struggle to learn to walk, and many never learn to speak. Some have an abnormally small head and have stunted growth.
There is no cure. Parents mainly focus on learning enough about how to cope to make everyday life workable.
A lot ...
2021-06-24
A study from the Centre for Nutraceuticals at the University of Westminster found that plant-based protein shakes may be potential viable alternatives to milk-based whey protein shakes, particularly in people with need of careful monitoring of glucose levels.
The study, published in the journal Nutrients, is the first to show potato and rice proteins can be just as effective at managing your appetite and can help better manage blood glucose levels and reduce spikes in insulin compared to whey protein.
During the study the blood metabolic response of participants was measured after ...
2021-06-24
New research has uncovered a novel trick employed by the bacterium Staphylococcus aureus to thwart the immune response, raising hopes that a vaccine that prevents deadly MRSA infections is a little closer on the horizon.
Immunologists from Trinity College Dublin, working with scientists at GSK - one of the world's largest vaccine manufacturers - discovered the new trick of the troublesome Staphylococcus aureus, which is the causative agent of the infamous "superbug" MRSA.
They found that the bacterium interferes with the host immune response by causing toxic effects on white blood cells, which prevents them from engaging in their infection-fighting jobs.
Importantly, the study also showed in a pre-clinical ...
2021-06-24
Scientists using computer modelling to study SARS-CoV-2, the virus that caused the COVID-19 pandemic, have discovered the virus is most ideally adapted to infect human cells - rather than bat or pangolin cells, again raising questions of its origin.
In a paper published in the Nature journal Scientific Reports, Australian scientists describe how they used high-performance computer modelling of the form of the SARS-CoV-2 virus at the beginning of the pandemic to predict its ability to infect humans and a range of 12 domestic and exotic animals.
Their work aimed to help identify any intermediate animal vector that ...
2021-06-24
Although IAT is commonly performed, there is variation in how, why, and where it is done. EULAR aimed to help standardise the way IAT is delivered, and explain to people what they can expect from the treatment. A EULAR taskforce was set up to develop a set of new recommendations to give guidance and advice on best practice for IAT.
The taskforce included doctors, nurses, surgeons, and other health professionals, as well as patients. The taskforce looked at the evidence on IAT. Because there is little published evidence, the taskforce also conducted two surveys ...
2021-06-24
Russia is the world's largest forest country. Being home to more than a fifth of forests globally, the country's forests and forestry have enormous potential to contribute to making a global impact in terms of climate mitigation. A new study by IIASA researchers, Russian experts, and other international colleagues have produced new estimates of biomass contained in Russian forests, confirming a substantial increase over the last few decades.
Since the dissolution of the USSR, Russia has been reporting almost no changes in its forests, while data obtained ...
2021-06-24
In the animal kingdom, specific growth factors control body axis development. These signalling molecules are produced by a small group of cells at one end of the embryo to be distributed in a graded fashion toward the opposite pole. Through this process, discrete spatial patterns arise that determine the correct formation of the head-foot axis. A research team at the Centre for Organismal Studies (COS) at Heidelberg University recently discovered an enzyme in the freshwater polyp Hydra that critically shapes this process by limiting the activity of certain growth factors.
In particular, the proteins of the so-called Wnt signalling pathway play an important role in the pattern formation of the primary ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] Smooth muscle overexpression of PGC1α attenuates atherosclerosis in rabbits