| Literature DB >> 33255685 |
Cédric H G Neutel1, Jhana O Hendrickx1, Wim Martinet1, Guido R Y De Meyer1, Pieter-Jan Guns1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Autophagy is a highly conserved catabolic homeostatic process, crucial for cell survival. It has been shown that autophagy can modulate different cardiovascular pathologies, including vascular calcification (VCN).Entities:
Keywords: aortic valve calcification; autophagy; lysosomes; valvular interstitial cell (VIC); vascular calcification; vascular smooth muscle cell (VSMC)
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33255685 PMCID: PMC7728070 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21238933
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1The autophagic process. The autophagic machinery starts with the formation of an isolation membrane, forming the double-membraned intermediate, the phagophore. The maturation of the phagophore into an autophagosome is dependent on the activity of two ubiquitin-like conjugation systems, the LC3-PE and Atg5-Atg12. In the first system, pro-microtubule-associated protein light chain 3 (proLC3) is cleaved by the cysteine protease Atg4 into LC3-I. LC3-I is then further processed into LC3-II and conjugated with phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) by Atg7 and Atg3, which are E1- and E2-homologous enzymes, respectively. LC3-II associates with the autophagic membranes with the aid of the Atg5-Atg12-Atg16 complex, facilitating phagophore maturation into an autophagosome. The Atg5-Atg12-Atg16 complex is formed by the action of Atg7 and Atg10, E1 and E2 enzymes respectively. This newly formed autophagosome then fuses with a lysosome forming an autolysosome. Here, lysosomal enzymes are responsible for the degradation of the autophagosome and its contents. Once degraded, the macromolecules (nutrients and metabolites) are secreted back into the cytosol. The shapes inside the phagophore and autophagosome are intra-cellular cargo such as (dysfunctional) mitochondria, (aggregated) proteins, etc. targeted for degradation; Atg = Autophagy related proteins.
Figure 2Review workflow.
Studies on the modulation of autophagy and lysosomal function in vascular calcification.
| Authors | Type of Intervention/Modulation | Methods/Matrix | Molecular Outcome | Study Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| [ | Non-pharmacological: | Adenine (0.75%)-induced CRF CaCl2 (1.8 mM) + Pi (3 mM) induced calcification | CRF/high Pi: ↑Autophagic flux; ↑LC3-II, ↑VSMC calcification; ↑MV release | Autophagy is upregulated in VCN and counteracts its progression, while autophagy inhibition has pro-calcification properties |
| [ | Genetic: | Adenine (0.75%)-induced CRF + High Pi diet (1.3% phosphorus) CaCl2 (3 mM) + Pi (2 mM)-induced calcification | CRF rats/High Pi: ↑Calcification, ↓HDAC1, ↑LC3-II, ↓p62, ↑LSD1 | HDAC1 overexpression attenuates VCN by inhibiting LSD1 via SESN2-dependent mTOR signalling |
| [ | Pharmacological: | High Pi diet (HPD; 20.2 g/kg phosphorus) induced calcification CaCl2 (1.8 mM) + β-GP (1.25 – 2.5 mM) induced VCN | HPD/β-GP: ↑( | Uremic media calcification increases autophagy, which acts as a protective mechanism. Enhancing autophagy with rapamycin, attenuates VCN |
| [ | Genetic and pharmacological: | CaCl2 (1.8 mM) + β-GP (10 mM) induced calcification | β-GP: ↑mTOR | mTOR is involved in the signal transduction of VCN, whilst inhibiting its activity attenuates VSMC mineralization and osteoblastic differentiation |
| [ | Pharmacological: | Adenine (0.75%)-induced CRF CaCl2 (1.4 mM) + Pi (3 mM)induced calcification | High Pi: ↑(p-mTOR, p-S6K), ↓ | Rapamycin attenuates VCN by upregulating Klotho via mTOR inhibition |
| [ | Pharmacological: | β-GP (10 mM) induced calcification | Bavachin: ↑(LC3-II, Beclin1), ↓p-mTOR, ↓(Runx2, BMP2, OPN, OPG), ↓(Wnt3A, β-catenin) | Bavachin suppresses HASMC calcification by acting on Atg7/mTOR-mediated autophagy signalling |
| [ | Pharmacological: | CaCl2 (1.8 mM) + β-GP (10 mM) induced VCN | Melatonin: ↓(VCN, Runx2, ALP activity); ↑(LC3-II, Beclin1, p-AMPK, p-ULK1), ↓p-mTOR | Melatonin attenuates VSMC calcification in vitro by acting on the AMPK/mTOR pathway |
| [ | Pharmacological: | CaCl2 (1.8 mM) + β-GP (10 mM) induced calcification | Metformin: ↓VSMC calcification, ↓(Runx2, BMP2), ↑p-AMPK, ↓PDK4, ↑LC3-II/LC3-I, ↓p62, ↑(TFAM, NRF1, PGC-1a) | Metformin-mediated AMPK activation attenuates Pi-induced calcification and restores disrupted mitochondrial biogenesisMitophagy regulates metformin-induced mitochondrial biogenesis |
| [ | Pharmacological: | VitD (300,000 IU/kg)+ Nicotine (25 mg/kg)-induced VCN CaCl2 (2.5 mM) + β-GP (5 mM) induced VCN | IMD1-53: ↓VCN, ↓(Runx2, BMP2), ↑MGP, ↑(Sirt1, p-AMPK, p-AKT, p-PKA), ↑Klotho | IMD1-53 plays a protective role in VCN by upregulating Sirt1 |
| [ | Pharmacological: | Vitamin D (300,000 IU/kg) + nicotine (25 mg/kg)- induced VCN CaCl2 (1.8 mM) + β-GP (10 mM) induced calcification | Ghrelin: ↓VCN, ↓ALP activity, ↑(LC3-II, Beclin1), ↑p-AMPK | Ghrelin attenuates VCN by inducing autophagy through AMPK activation |
| [ | Pharmacological: | Vitamin D (300,000 IU/kg) + nicotine (5 mL/kg) induced VCN | MOTS-c: ↓VCN, ↓(Aortic calcium content, ALP activity), ↑p-AMPK, ↓(AT-1 receptor, ET-B receptor) | MOTS-c attenuates VCN by activating the AMPK pathway |
| [ | Non-pharmacological: | CaCl2 (1.8 mM) + Pi (5 mM)-induced calcification | IS Pi: ↓VCN, ↓(Runx2), ↑(LC3-II), ↑Autophagic flux | Intermittent Pi increases autophagic flux and ameliorates VSMC calcification, intermittent valproic acid treatment, however, does not attenuate VCN |
| [ | Pharmacological: | Ox-LDL induced VSMC calcification (1.8 mM CaCl2 + 10 mM β-GP) | Ox-LDL: ↑VSMC calcification, ↑ | FPS protects human VSMCs from Ox-LDL induced calcification, by activating autophagy |
| [ | Genetic: | CaCl2 (1.8 mM) + High Pi (1.4 – 2.5 mM)-induced calcification | Nrf2-siRNA: ↑Calcification, ↑(BMP2, Runx2), ↓Autophagosomes, ↓LC3-II/LC3-I | Activation of the Nrf2-ARE pathway alleviates hyperphosphatemia-induced calcification, possibly by inducing autophagy |
| [ | Pharmacological: | Vitamin D (500,000 IU/kg) induced calcification CaCl2 (1.8 mM) + β-GP (10 mM) induced calcification | Oestrogen: ↓Calcification, ↓(Runx2, ALP activity), ↑(Atg5, LC3-I, LC3-II) | Oestrogen-induced autophagy inhibits arterial calcification through the ERα pathway |
| [ | Pharmacological: | CaCl2 (1.8 mM) + TGF-β1 (2 ng/mL)-induced calcification | Atorvastatin: ↓Calcification; ↓(ALP, BMP2, Osteocalcin), ↓Nuclear β-catenin expression, ↑Autophagy; ↑(Beclin1, Atg5, LC3-II/LC3-I ratio) | Atorvastatin suppresses TGF-β1-induced VCN by inducing autophagy via downregulation of the β-catenin pathway |
| [ | Pharmacological: | (5/6 nephrectomy (Nx) + high Pi (1.2%) diet)-induced CKD (CaCl2 (1.8 mM) + β-GP (10 mM) induced calcification | miR-30b mimic: ↓VCN, ↓(SOX9, Msx2, Runx2) | miRNA-30b protects against VCN by promoting MMP and autophagy, via targeted inhibition of SOX9 or negatively regulating the mTOR pathway |
| [ | Genetic: | Calcitriol (500,000 IU/kg/day)induced arterial calcification CaCl2 (1.4 mM) + β-GP (10 mM) induced calcification | ANCR overexpression: ↓Calcification, ↓(BMP2, Runx2), ↑(Atg5, LC3-II, LC3-I) | ANCR attenuates VCN and VSMC osteochondrogenic differentiation by activating autophagy |
| [ | Genetic: | Age-induced calcification (10 weeks) | Beclin1 overexpression alleviates | |
| [ | Non-pharmacological: | CaCl2 (1.8 mM) + Pi (5 mM)-induced calcification | Iron citrate: ↓Calcification, ↑Autophagosomes, ↑Autophagic flux, ↑LC3-Iiβ | Iron citrate blocks the progression of calcification by inducing autophagy |
| [ | Pharmacological: | CaCl2 (1.8 mM) + β-GP (10 mM) induced calcification | AGEs: ↑HIF-1α, ↑PDK4, ↑LC3-II, ↓p62, ↑(Autophagosomes, autolysosomes),↑LC3-II & LAMP1 colocalization | AGEs induce autophagy through HIF-1α/PDK4 signalling, which has protective effects against AGEs-induced VCN |
| [ | Pharmacological: | AGEs: ↑VCN, ↑(BMP2, RUNX2), ↓(BECN, LC3-II, p-AMPK↓), ↑p-mTOR | AGEs induce VSMC calcification by suppressing autophagy through action on the AMPK/mTOR signalling pathway | |
| [ | Pharmacological: | Western diet induced VCN CaCl2 (1.8 mM) + β-GP (10 mM) induced VCN | Agonist-CD137: ↑AMC and osteogenic VSMC phenotype transition; ↑(Beclin1, p62, LC3B), autophagosome accumulation | CD137 activation disrupts autophagic flux and accelerates calcification through the action of the JNK phosphorylation |
| [ | Genetic: | (5/6 nephrectomy (Nx) + high Pi (1.2%) diet)-induced CKD CaCl2 (1.8 mM) + β-GP (10 mM) induced calcification | shOGT: ↓VCN | Upregulated OGT in high Pi diet-fed CKD rats, promotes glycosylation of YAP to inhibit autophagy, facilitating VCN |
| [ | Non-pharmacological: | CaCl2 (1.8 mM) + Pi (2.6 mM) induced calcification | Excess saturated LPAs cause omegasome formation, which in turn produces and accumulates isolation membranes, blocks autophagic flux and causes VCNGpat4 converts SFAs to saturated LPAs, which makes Gpat4 an interesting target in VCN | |
| [ | Non-pharmacological: | CaCl2 (1.4 mM) + β-GP (10 mM) induced calcification | Lactate: ↑Calcification; ↑(BMP2, Runx2), ↓α –SMA, ↓Autophagy/Mitophagy;↓(LC3-II, BNIP3), ↑p62, ↑Mitochondrial fission; ↑mito-Drp1, ↓OPA1, ↑NR4A1 | Lactate inhibits BNIP3-mediated mitophagy via the NR4A1/DNA-PKcs/p53 pathway, enhancing mitochondrial fission and therefore accelerating VCN |
| [ | Non-pharmacological: | CaCl2 (1.4 mM) + β-GP (10 mM) induced calcification | Lactate: ↑Calcification; ↑(BMP2, Runx2, ALP activity), ↓Mitochondrial function & biogenesis, ↓Autophagic flux; ↓Autolysosomes, ↓LC3-II, ↑p62, ↓Mitochondrial clearance/Mitophagy; ↑TOMM20, ↓BNIP3 | Lactate accelerates VCN by facilitating mitochondrial dysfunction and inhibiting BNIP3-mediated mitophagy |
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| [ | Non-pharmacological: | Pi/HAP-induced calcification | Pi + HAP: ↑Calcification, ↑(Runx2, BMP2), ↓Lysosome integrity | Adhesion of HAP causes cell injury, which leads cell damage and decreased lysosomal integrity, therefore contributing to the development of VCN |
| [ | Genetic: | Vitamin D (500,000 IU/kg/bw/day) induced AMC CaCl2 (1.8 mM) + Pi (3 mM) induced VSMC calcification, incubated +/- MLSA-1 or verapamil | Mcoln1−/−: ↑AMC and SMC osteogenic phenotype transition (in vivo), ↓Lysosomal trafficking/MVB colocalization, ↑sEV secretion | |
| [ | Genetic: | Vitamin D (500,000 IU/kg/bw/day) induced AMC CaCl2 (1.8 mM) + Pi (3 mM) induced CASMC calcification | ||
| [ | Genetic: | Vitamin D (500,000 IU/kg/bw/day) induced AMC CaCl2 (1.8 mM) + Pi (3 mM) induced calcification | Lysosomal overexpression of | |
| [ | Pharmacological: | CaCl2 (1.8 mM) + Pi (3 mM) induced calcification | 7-KC: ↑Calcium deposition/calcification, Autophagosome accumulation, ↑(p62, LC3-II), ↓Mature cathepsin B and D | 7-KC induces oxidative stress through lysosomal dysfunction, aggravating HASMCs calcification |
| [ | Non-pharmacological and genetic: | Hypoxia-induced pulmonary artery calcification (Hypoxic pulmonary arterial hypertension) Hypoxia-induced SMC calcification | Hypoxia: ↑VCN, ↑(Runx2, BMP2, MSX2, SOX9), ↓GZMB, ↑Chaperone-mediated autophagy, ↑(HSPA8, LAMP2A) | Chaperone-mediated autophagy degrades GZMB, which promotes pulmonary VCN |
Abbreviations: 3-MA = 3-methyladenine; a-SMA = alpha-smooth muscle actin; AKT = protein kinase B; ALP = Alkaline phosphatase; AMC = Arterial medial calcification; AMPK = AMP-activated protein kinase; ARE = Antioxidant response element; AT-1 = Angiotensin II receptor type 1; BASMC = Bovine aortic smooth muscle cell; BECN = Beclin1; BMP2 = Bone morphogenetic protein 2; BNIP3 = BCL2 and adenovirus E1B 19-kDa-interacting protein 3; CBFA1 = Core-binding factor alpha 1; CKD = Chronic kidney disease; CRF = Chronic renal failure; Drp1 = Dynamin-1-like protein; ET-B = Endothelin B; Gpat4 = Glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase 4; HAP = Hydroxyapatite; HIF-1a = Hypoxia-inducible factor 1-alpha; HPD = High Pi diet; HSPA8 = Heat shock protein family A (Hsp70) member 8; JNK = c-Jun N-terminal kinases; LAMP2A = Lysosome associated membrane protein 2; LC3 = Light chain 3; LPA = Lysophosphatidic acid; LSD1 = Lysine-specific histone demethylase 1; MGP = Matrix Gla protein; Msx2 = Msh homeobox 2; mTOR = mammalian target of rapamycin; MV = Matrix vesicle; NR4A1 = Nerve growth factor IB; NRF1 = Nuclear respiratory factor 1; Nrf2 = Nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor; OC = Osteocalcin; OGT = O-linked N-Acetylglucosamine transferase; OPA1 = Optic atrophy protein 1; OPG = Osteoprotegerin; OPN/OSP = Osteopontin; Ox-LDL = oxidized low density lipoprotein; p-AKT = phosphorylated AKT; p-AMPK = phosphorylated AMPK; p-mTOR = phosphorylated mTOR; p-PKA = phosphorylated protein kinase A; p-ULK1 = phosphorylated ULK1; PDK4 = Pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase 4; PGC-1a = peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma coactivator 1-alpha; Pi = inorganic phosphate; PKA = Protein kinase A; RUNX2 = Runt-related transcription factor 2; Scd1/2 = Stearoyl-CoA desaturase-1/2; SD rats = Sprague Dawley rats; SESN2 = Sestrin 2; sEV = Small extracellular vesicle; SFA = Saturated fatty acid; Sirt1b = Sirtuin 1; SM22a = smooth muscle protein 22-alpha; SOX9 = SoxE group member SRY (sex determining region Y)- box 9; TFAM = Transcription factor A, mitochondrial; TOMM20/40 = Translocase of the outer mitochondrial membrane 20/40; TRPML1 = Mucolipin-1; UFA = Unsaturated fatty acid; ULK1 = Unc-51 Like Autophagy Activating Kinase 1; VCN = Vascular calcification; VitD = vitamin D; VSMC = Vascular smooth muscle cell; YAP = Yes-associated protein; β-GP = β-glycerophosphate.
Studies on autophagy in valvular calcification.
| Authors | Type of Intervention/Modulation | Methods/Matrix | Molecular Outcome | Study Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Observational: | CAVS: ↓(ULK1, MAP1LC3A), ↑(BECN1, ATG3, ATG5, ATG7, ATG12), ↓(LAMP1, CTSD), ↑(CTSB, CTSV, CTSL), =TFEB | Autophagy is upregulated in the aortic valves from CAVS patients as a pro-survival mechanism | |
| [ | Observational: | VICs from CAVS patients: ↓LC3-II | Autophagy attenuates osteochondrogenic response in human AVICs | |
| [ | Observational: | CAVS: ↑Ubiquitin | Large amount of ubiquitinated cells are present in calcified aortic valve tissue, indicating possible higher autophagic activity | |
| [ | Non-pharmacological: | Pi (+/− LPS and 20% bovine macrophage conditioned medium (CM))—induced calcification | LPS + CM: ↑Calcification, ↓Autophagic vacuoles, ↓RER hypertrophy, ↓MAP1LC3 | High Pi concentrations lead to pro-calcific cell death, while low/middle Pi activate RER-dependent autophagic activity |
Abbreviations: (MAP1) LC3 = (Microtubule-associated proteins 1A/1B) light chain 3B; ALP = Alkaline phosphatase; ATG = Autophagy related; BECN1 = Beclin-1; BMP2 = Bone morphogenetic protein 2; CTS = cathepsin; LAMP1 = Lysosome associated membrane protein 1; LPS = Lipopolysaccharide; RER = Rough endoplasmic reticulum; TFEB = Transcription factor EB; ULK1 = Unc-51 like autophagy activating kinase 1.
Figure 3Modulating the autophagic machinery in vascular calcification. A high Pi environment promotes vascular smooth muscle cell (VSMC) calcification. This pro-calcific environment increases the activity of the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR), as well as O-GlcNAc transferase (OGT). The latter enhances YAP glycosylation. Additionally, epigenetic regulation of mTOR activity is also affected by the high Pi environment. Histone deacetylase 1 (HDAC1) is downregulated, while lysine-specific histone demethylase A1 (LSD1) is upregulated, resulting in enhanced mTOR activity. Both the increase in glycosylated (Glc) YAP and mTOR activity inhibit autophagy, facilitating VSMC calcification. Therefore, direct or AMPK-mediated inhibition of mTOR, through the use of different pharmacological agents, alleviates mTOR-dependent suppression of autophagy and ameliorates VSMC calcification. Saturated fatty acids, which are present in the pro-calcific environment, as seen in patients with chronic kidney disease, inhibit autophagy and are shown to facilitate VSMC calcification. Stimulation of autophagy with various pharmacological agents has been shown to attenuate VSMC calcification. Lastly, BNIP3-mediated mitophagy plays an important role in VSMC calcification, as inhibition of this pathway with lactate, promotes mineralization. AMPK = AMP-activated kinase, mTOR = mammalian target of rapamycin, HDAC1 = Histone deacetylase 1, LSD1 = Lysine-specific histone demethylase A1, OGT = O-GlcNAc transferase, Glc = Glycosylated, YAP = Yes-associated protein, BNIP3 = BCL2 and adenovirus E1B 19-kDa-interacting protein 3, ANCR = anti-differentiation non-coding RNA.
Figure 4Modulating lysosomal function in vascular calcification. In a pro-calcific environment, calciumphosphate-loaded multivesicular bodies (MVBs), a type of late endosome, can either be degraded or secrete their contents to the extracellular matrix. In physiological conditions, there is a balance between degradation and secretion. Impairment of lysosomal function leads to decreased degradation of MVBs and enhanced secretion of pro-calcific extracellular vesicles (EVs). Transient receptor potential mucolipin 1 (TRPML1) is important for proper lysosome functioning, mediating the fusion of lysosomes with autophagosomes and endosomes. Knockout of the TRPML1 channel through the deletion of the mucolipin 1 gene, Mcoln1, impairs lysosome function, thereby enhancing the release of pro-calcific EVs and aggravating vascular calcification (VCN). Sphingosine is necessary for TRPML1 activity. Impairing the biosynthesis of sphingosine from ceramide, through the inhibition of the enzyme acid ceramidase, consequently impairs TRPML1 function, leading to enhanced sEV secretion and VCN. The balance between ceramide and sphingosine levels inside the lysosome dictates lysosomal function. Enhanced levels of ceramide through overexpression of the Smpd1 gene, which encodes for acid sphingomyelinase, impairs lysosome function. Overexpression of Smpd1 leads to enhanced secretion of EVs and VCN. Additionally, impairing lysosomal function with 7-ketocholesterol aggravates VCN. Finally, in a hypoxic environment, granzyme B is degraded via Heat shock protein family A (Hsp70) member 8 (HSPA8)-dependent chaperone-mediated autophagy. However, granzyme B has been shown to be protective against VCN. Therefore, chaperone-mediated autophagy worsens hypoxia-induced calcification. sEV = small Extracellular vesicle, MVB = Multivesicular bodies, HSPA8 = Heat shock protein family A (Hsp70) member 8.