Ciprian B Anea1, Ana M Merloiu1, David J R Fulton1, Vijay Patel2, R Dan Rudic1. 1. Department of Pharmacology & Toxicology, Medical College of Georgia at Augusta University, Augusta, GA 30912, USA. 2. Department of Surgery, Medical College of Georgia at Augusta University, Augusta, GA 30912, USA.
Abstract
Aim: The circadian clock is a molecular network that controls the body physiological rhythms. In blood vessels, the circadian clock components modulate vascular remodeling, blood pressure, and signaling. The goal in this study was to determine the pattern of expression of circadian clock proteins in the endothelium, smooth muscle, and adventitia of the vasculature of human and mouse tissues. Methods: Immunohistochemistry was performed in frozen sections of mouse aorta, common carotid artery, femoral artery, lung, and heart at 12 AM and 12 PM for Bmal1, Clock, Npas2, Per and other clock components. Studies of expression were also assessed in human saphenous vein both by immunoblotting and immunohistochemistry. Results: In this study, we identified the expression of Bmal1, Clock, Npas, Per1, Cry1, and accessory clock components by immunohistochemical staining in the endothelium, smooth muscle and adventitia of the mouse vasculature with differing temporal and cellular profiles depending on vasculature and tissue analyzed. The human saphenous vein also exhibited expression of clock genes that exhibited an oscillatory pattern in Bmal1 and Cry by immunoblotting. Conclusion: These studies show that circadian clock components display differences in expression and localization throughout the cardiovascular system, which may confer nuances of circadian clock signaling in a cell-specific manner.
Aim: The circadian clock is a molecular network that controls the body physiological rhythms. In blood vessels, the circadian clock components modulate vascular remodeling, blood pressure, and signaling. The goal in this study was to determine the pattern of expression of circadian clock proteins in the endothelium, smooth muscle, and adventitia of the vasculature of human and mouse tissues. Methods: Immunohistochemistry was performed in frozen sections of mouse aorta, common carotid artery, femoral artery, lung, and heart at 12 AM and 12 PM for Bmal1, Clock, Npas2, Per and other clock components. Studies of expression were also assessed in human saphenous vein both by immunoblotting and immunohistochemistry. Results: In this study, we identified the expression of Bmal1, Clock, Npas, Per1, Cry1, and accessory clock components by immunohistochemical staining in the endothelium, smooth muscle and adventitia of the mouse vasculature with differing temporal and cellular profiles depending on vasculature and tissue analyzed. The human saphenous vein also exhibited expression of clock genes that exhibited an oscillatory pattern in Bmal1 and Cry by immunoblotting. Conclusion: These studies show that circadian clock components display differences in expression and localization throughout the cardiovascular system, which may confer nuances of circadian clock signaling in a cell-specific manner.
This circadian clock is a signaling mechanism that controls 24 h rhythmic
oscillations. Heterodimeric interactions of clock transcription factors including
Clock, Npas2 with Bmal1 bind E-box response elements of respective genes and drive
transcription of downstream negative clock regulators or putative output genes that
regulate physiologic function. In the circadian clock loop, the Bmal1-Clock
heterodimer serves to cause transcription of Period and Cry genes which are then
translated to proteins, form heterodimers themselves, and cycle from the cytoplasm
back into to the nucleus to inhibit Bmal1 and Clock. This molecular mechanism is
expressed through the body, generating cyclic 24 h physiological rhythms. In blood
vessels, the circadian clock is also oscillating[. Since blood vessels are comprised of three distinct
cellular layers, the endothelial cell layer, smooth muscle cell layer, and the
adventitial layer, circadian clocks may exert cell specific and cell-coordinated
functional actions intrinsic within the vasculature. Evidence of vascular
cell-specific functions of the circadian clock has first been demonstrated in global
knockout models. Global disruption of Bmal1 or Period genes impairs endothelial
function and detrimentally influences the adaptation of the vasculature both acutely
and chronically[. While the circadian clock
is a resilient or robust signaling pathway whereby its disruption is not lethal due
to redundancy, intercellular, and intracellular coupling[, overexpression of clock components has been shown
to offer protection against deleterious vascular phenotypes[. In cell specific knockout models of the intrinsic
vasculature, smooth muscle disruption of Bmal1 results in alterations in rhythmic
blood pressure[, disruption of the circadian clock in the endothelium
worsens the thrombogenic response and also affects blood pressure[, and vascular
transplantation of Bmal1-KO mice into WT mice induces arteriosclerotic
response[. In the current study, we sought to examine the
cellular expression of the circadian clock in the mouse and human vascular
tissue.
METHODS
Animals
All animal studies were performed according to protocols approved by the
Medical College of Georgia Institutional Committee for Use and Care of
Laboratory Animals at Augusta University. Normal wild type C57BL6 mice were used
in all experiments.
Human blood vessels
Segments of intact human saphenous vein were obtained as discarded tissue
from other surgical procedures. The procurement of these tissues conforms to the
principles outlined in the Declaration of Helsinki and was approved by the human
assurances committee of the Augusta University.
Materials
Tissue sections were probed using the following Antibodies: polyclonal
for Bmal1 (Affinty Bioreagents), monoclonal for Clock (Santa Cruz), monoclonal
for Npas2 (Abnova), polyclonal for Per1 (Affinty Bioreagents), polyclonal for
Cry1 (Novus Biologicals), polyclonal for Rev-erbα (Cell Signaling
Technology), polyclonal for Rora (Cell Signaling Technology), monoclonal for
Ck1-e (Bectin Dickinson), and polyclonal antibody for Epas (Novus Biologicals),
to determine protein expression and localization within the blood vessel.
Western blotting
Excess tissue from human saphenous veins from patients undergoing
coronary arterial bypass surgeries (CABG) were transferred to a dish and kept in
EBM2 media (Lonza) in the incubator at 37 °C for further processing at
serial time points. Vessels were pooled to permit detection of specific
proteins, pulverized on liquid nitrogen, and then immersed into protein lysis
buffer.
Immunohistochemistry
Vascular tissue samples were dissected from regular wild type C57Bl6
mice, and rapidly embedded for frozen cross-sectioning. Sections were cut at 5
μm and mounted onto glass slides. Afterwards, Clock components were
immunohistochemically detected. Briefly, the indirect avidin biotin-horseradish
peroxidase visualization method was used (ABC Standard and Elite, Vector Red,
Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, USA). Samples were incubated with the detection
primary antibody at the manufacturer’s recommended concentration.
RESULTS
To determine the cellular and temporal expression of the vascular clock, we
harvested tissues from wild-type mice at 12 AM and 12 PM and conducted
immunohistochemical analysis of different circadian clock components. At 12 AM, the
common carotid artery, aorta, and femoral artery and vein exhibited Bmal1 expression
that was largely delineated in the outer adventitial region of the blood vessel
[Figure 1A]. Smooth muscle
cell expression and endothelial expression were virtually absent. Similarly, at 12
AM, heart and lung exhibited low expression of Bmal1. At 12:00 PM, adventitial Bmal1
expression was reduced, while smooth muscle and endothelial Bmal1 was increased in
carotid, aorta, and femoral artery and vein. In heart, there was increased Bmal1
staining that was also evident in lung. Clock staining exhibited enhanced
endothelial positivity at 12 AM and was virtually absent adventitial staining in
contrast to Bmal1, but did exhibit increased overall tissue expression at 12 PM
similar to Bmal1 [Figure 1B].
Cry 1 exhibited little adventitial staining in carotid arteries at either time
point, but medial (smooth muscle) staining was increased at 12 PM, as it was also
observed in aorta [Figure 1C].
In femoral artery and vein, in contrast to Bmal1 and Clock, Cry exhibited robust
expression at 12 PM in the adventitia. In both heart and lung, Cry1 positive cells
were robustly increased at 12 PM, with a punctate nuclear stain. In carotid artery
and aorta at 12 AM, casein kinase expression was robust, but restricted to the
adventitia, and became diffuse in the media at 12 PM [Figure 1D]. Femoral artery, vein, heart and lung
followed expression patterns that aligned with the other circadian clock components.
Npas2 exhibited a distinctive adventitial staining in all three vessel beds
examined, different from the other clock components that occurred at 12 PM, and
exhibited punctate nuclear staining in heart tissue and more diffuse staining in
lung [Figure 1E]. Ror exhibited
medial staining in the blood vessels but most distinctive was in lung tissue, where
epithelial cells of bronchioles were highly positive, unique from other clock
components [Figure 1F]. Per1
exhibited a strong medial expression in all vascular tissues [Figure 1G, first 3 panels], and also a diffuse
expression in heart and lung [Figure
1G, last 2 panels].
Figure 1
Circadian clock expression in murine cardiovascular tissues. Antibodies to Bmal1
(A), Clock (B), Cry1 (C), Casein kinase (D), Npas2 (E), Rora (F), and Per1 (G)
were incubated with frozen carotid artery, aorta, femoral artery/vein, heart,
and lung isolated at indicated times of the day to assess localization
expression
To complement the study, we next assessed circadian clock expression in the
human saphenous vein [Figure
2]. Bmal1 and Clock expression were increased throughout the media at
12 PM relative to 12 AM and exhibited strong endothelium staining. Npas2 staining
was relatively absent in the saphenous vein, while Per1 exhibited increased
expression at 12 AM relative to 12 PM. Cry1 did not exhibit any temporal difference
in expression but was expressed throughout the media. Rev-erbα expression
was distributed throughout the media and did not exhibit a temporal expression
pattern while Rora and Epas were increased in the media at 12 PM. Casein kinase was
not robustly expressed in the saphenous but was increased at 12 PM. We then examined
saphenous vein expression of the positive limb component Bmal1 and negative limb
component Cry and examined expression by western blot [Figure 3]. Bmal1 trough occurred at 6 PM, while
Cry peaked at 6 PM, and Bmal1 peaked at 15:00 (3 PM) while Cry1 was at nadir at
18:00, consistent with the antiphase nature of the positive and negative limb
components.
Figure 2
Circadian clock expression in human saphenous vein. Human saphenous veins that
remained from coronary artery bypass were immediately procured post-operatively,
and incubated in an oxygenated 37 °C incubator. At indicated times,
sections of the saphenous vein were frozen in OCT, then sectioned, and incubated
with indicated antibodies to the circadian clock
Figure 3
Bmal1 and Cry expression in the human saphenous vein. Human saphenous vein was
incubated at 37 °C, and sections were harvested at 3 h intervals from
midnight (24:00) to 21:00 (9 PM) for a 21-h time span. At indicated times,
saphenous veins were flash frozen and subsequently protein lysates isolated for
western blotting (top panel) that was densitometrically quantified (bottom
panels)
DISCUSSION
The circadian clock is a cell synchronized signaling pathway that serves to
control timing. Within the cardiovascular system, heart[, vascular[, lung[, and even kidney circadian clocks[ are functional and rhythmic. Because organs are
comprised of a heterogeneous population of cells, there are likely cell-specific
circadian profiles and expression patterns distinct to the various cell types.
Indeed it is known that at the level of the organ, oscillations are different.
Central clock oscillation in the SCN is known to oscillate in a different phase than
peripheral tissues[, whereby the SCN is phase advanced to the kidney,
which is phase advanced to aorta which is then phase advanced relative to
liver[.
The arterial system is composed of three layers; there is an adventitial layer
(fibroblasts, pericytes, macrophages)[, smooth muscle cell layer (media), and an
endothelial cell layer (endothelium). The current study examined clock expression in
mouse vascular tissue and the human saphenous vein. The approach we elected to use
was immunohistochemistry to study clock expression. One key advantage of
immunohistological techniques is the ability to differentiate cellular localization.
We in particular were interested in endothelial vs. smooth muscle,
vs. the adventitia. To some extent, immunohistochemistry can
also provide a rough estimate of nuclear staining or extranuclear staining, but
generally distinguishing between subcellular compartments is limited by IHC. In
terms of using a fluorescent secondary vs. a chromogenic secondary
antibody, both are useful, and generally there can be some background fluorescence
in tissues with regard to lamina in the vasculature, so we chose the chromogenic
susbstrate reaction. In mouse, Bmal1 expression revealed a very strong expression
pattern at midnight in the adventitia, in the common carotid artery and aorta and
this adventitial staining was decreased at noon. Similarly, casein kinase and Npas2
were also highly expressed in the adventitia. Conversely, media and endothelium
staining for Bmal1 was stronger at noon, suggesting that the vascular cell layers
are uniquely controlled, which may reflect specific timing of the individual
cell-type but may also relate to coordination of paracrine signaling from cell-layer
to cell layer. In the femoral artery, adventitial staining was most striking for
Npas2 and Cry1. Clock the heterodimeric partner to Bmal1 was not as strongly
expressed, but followed a similar temporal profile to Bmal1 in the carotid and aorta
in the media. In the heart, all clock components exhibited nominal staining at 12
AM, but expression was robustly increased at 12 PM. In lung, the bronchiole
epithelial cells were highly positive for Rora. In the human saphenous vein, Bmal1
exhibited stronger expression at 12 PM vs. 12 AM, while Per1 was in
antiphase to Bmal1. Similarly, by western blotting, Bmal1 was antiphase to Cry1.
Interestingly, we have previously found that endothelial mechanisms such as eNOS and
Akt follow or mirror circadian clock expression in particular in regions of altered
blood flow[,
while others have demonstrated that eNOS follows the clock in
aging[.
In the human veins, the clock was also expressed, and although blood pressure is
lower in the venous system than arterial, there is also evidence of a circadian
rhythm in blood pressure in the venous system[. Another potential significance of
the circadian clock in the venous system is that it may also relate to disorders
such as orthostatic hypotension. Orthostatic hypotension has a prominent circadian
component, which may relate to autonomic input dysfunction[ on both the arterial and
venous system, and interestingly has emerged as characteristic in
Parkinson’s disease[. Thus the circadian system may be exerting different
functions in the cells within the arterial system and venous system, all which still
is largely unknown. Our studies show that circadian clock components display
differences in expression and localization throughout the cardiovascular system,
which may confer nuances of circadian clock signaling in a cell-specific manner. The
bloodstream is a key conduit that relays biomechanical (hypertension) and
biochemical information (hypercholesterolemia) from environmental change or
disturbance (jet lag, shift work, sleep dysfunction) to the vasculature, while there
may also be direct acting clock dampeners such as aging that act on endothelial
cells directly to worsen clock function [Figure 4]. These signals may impair function of the clock in ECs
to impair other EC’s or to impair SMCs, though it is still not clear if EC
clocks communicate with SMC clocks and if there is even EC to EC cell communication.
Understanding oscillations of the clock in the cellular milieu of the vasculature
will be crucial in delineating how clocks can influence pathology of hypertension
and atherosclerosis and ultimately permit the development of improved therapeutic
approaches that include timing and clocks into maximizing efficacy and
treatment.
Figure 4
Dysfunctional oscillations in blood, ECs, and SMCs: a potential path to
cardiovascular disease. The vasculature has an indirect interaction to the
external environment via the bloodstream which is the relay between
brain-secreted signals and of curse just eating, for example. Changes in
biomechanics and biochemistry od blood could impact underlying endothelial and
smooth muscle clocks. Aging and other factors could even impact the ECs and SMCs
directly. SMCs: smooth muscle cells; ECs: endothelial cells
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