| Literature DB >> 29270409 |
Takuro Miyazaki1, Akira Miyazaki1.
Abstract
Vascular inflammation in atheroprone vessels propagates throughout the arterial tree in dyslipidemic patients, thereby accelerating atherosclerotic progression. To elucidate the mechanism of vascular inflammation, most previous studies have focused on inflammation-related signals that are sent in response to vasoactive stimuli. However, it is also important to understand how normal blood vessels become defective and start degenerating. Growing evidence suggests that major protein catabolism pathways, including the ubiquitin-proteasome, autophagy, and calpain systems, are disturbed in atheroprone vessels and contribute to the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis. Indeed, dysregulation of ubiquitin-proteasome pathways results in the accumulation of defective proteins in blood vessels, leading to vascular endothelial dysfunction and apoptosis in affected cells. Impaired autophagy-lysosomal degradation affects smooth muscle cell transformation and proliferation, as well as endothelial integrity and phagocytic clearance of cellular corpses. Dysregulation of the calpain system confers proatherogenic properties to endothelial cells, smooth muscle cells, and macrophages. In this review article, we will discuss the current information available on defective protein catabolism in atheroprone vessels and its potential interrelation with inflammation-related signals.Entities:
Keywords: apoptosis; autophagy; calpain; efferocytosis; inflammasome; mechanotransduction; nitric oxide; ubiquitin proteasome
Year: 2017 PMID: 29270409 PMCID: PMC5725411 DOI: 10.3389/fcvm.2017.00079
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cardiovasc Med ISSN: 2297-055X
Figure 1Roles of defective protein catabolism in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis. Autophagic flux leads to insufficient mechanosignaling in endothelial cells (ECs), impaired phenotypic conversion in vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs), proinflammatory actions in macrophages, and defective efferocytosis, thereby accelerating the onset of atherosclerosis. Proteasomal defects induce the depletion of nitric oxide in ECs and harmful proinflammatory responses in macrophages, despite protecting cells from apoptotic and non-apoptotic cell death. Overactivation of conventional calpains leads to impaired EC integrity, VSMC phenotypic conversion, and increased macrophage atherogenicity. Calpain-6 contributes to efferocytic pathways in macrophages. LDL, low-density lipoprotein; NO, nitric oxide.
Protein catabolism defects and atherosclerosis-related events.
| Cell type | Events | Related processes | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Autophagic flux | ECs | NO depletion | Mechanotransduction | ( |
| Endothelial NO synthase uncoupling | Mechanotransduction | ( | ||
| VSMCs | Fibrogenic response | VSMC transformation to synthetic phenotype | ( | |
| Macrophages | Vascular inflammation | Inflammasome secretion of IL-1β | ( | |
| Impaired efferocytosis | Efferocytic clearance of dead cells | ( | ||
| Proteasomal defects | ECs | Impaired vasodilation | NO production | ( |
| Macrophages | Proinflammation | NF-κB activation (inhibitor κB degradation) | ( | |
| Vascular protection? | Anti-apoptosis | ( | ||
| Overactive calpain | ECs | Barrier dysfunction | VE-cadherin disorganization | ( |
| Endothelial disintegrity | NO depletion | ( | ||
| VSMCs | Arterial fibrosis | Upregulation of NF-κB signals | ( | |
| Age-associated vascular fibrosis | VSMC transformation to synthetic phenotype | ( | ||
| Vascular calcification | VSMC transformation to synthetic phenotype | ( | ||
| Carotid restenosis | VSMC transformation to synthetic phenotype | ( | ||
| Macrophages | Vascular inflammation | Upregulation of NF-κB signals | ( | |
| Impaired efferocytosis | mRNA splicing defects (calpain-6) | ( | ||
ECs, vascular endothelial cells; VSMCs, vascular smooth muscle cells; NO, nitric oxide; IL-1β, interleukin-1β; NF-κB, nuclear factor-κB; VE-cadherin, vascular endothelial-cadherin.