| Literature DB >> 35456051 |
Meng Li1, Yanqing Wu1, Lei Ye2.
Abstract
The vascular endothelium acts as an important component of the vascular system. It is a barrier between the blood and vessel wall. It plays an important role in regulating blood vessel tone, permeability, angiogenesis, and platelet functions. Several studies have shown that amino acids (AA) are key regulators in maintaining vascular homeostasis by modulating endothelial cell (EC) proliferation, migration, survival, and function. This review summarizes the metabolic and signaling pathways of AAs in ECs and discusses the importance of AA homeostasis in the functioning of ECs and vascular homeostasis. It also discusses the challenges in understanding the role of AA in the development of cardiovascular pathophysiology and possible directions for future research.Entities:
Keywords: amino acids; endothelial function; endothelium; metabolism; nitric oxide
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35456051 PMCID: PMC9030017 DOI: 10.3390/cells11081372
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 7.666
Figure 1Schemetic diagram of AA metabolism in endothelial cells. Abbreviations used: α-KG: alpha-ketoglutarate; ASNS: asparagine synthetase; ARG: arginase; GLS: glutaminase; GSAL: L-glutamate-γ-semialdehyde; GSALDH: GSAL dehydrogenase; NOS: nitric oxide synthase; OAT: ornithine δ-amino acid transferase; P5C: 1-pyrroline-5-carboxylate; P5CS: P5C synthase; PHGDH: phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase; PSAT1: phosphoserine aminotransferase; P5CR: pyrroline-5-carboxylate reductase; PRODH: proline dehydrogenase; PSPH: phosphoserine phosphatase; SR: serine racemase; SHMT: hydroxymethyltransferase; TAC: tricarboxylic acid cycle; 3PG: 3-phosphoglycerate; 3PHP: 3-phosphohydroxypyruvate; 3PS: 3-phosphoserine.
Relationship between amino acids and diabetic vasculopathy.
| Risk Factors | Experimental Model | Amino Acids | Findings | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Diabetes | Patients with T2Ds | Serum AAs | Significantly decreased levels of arginine, asparagine, glycine, serine, threonine, and significantly increased levels of alanine, isoleucine, leucine, and valine in diabetics. | [ |
| Hyperglycemic human aortic ECs | AAs metabolism | ECs exposed to short-term hyperglycemia showed increased levels of alanine, proline, glycine, serine, and glutamine. AAs oxidative stress metabolites significantly increased when ECs exposed to glucose for 7 days. | [ | |
| HiPSC lines from patients with T2Ds | Glycine | Dia-hiPSC-ECs had disrupted glycine homeostasis, increased senescence, and impaired mitochondrial function and angiogenic potential as compared with healthy hiPSC-ECs. | [ | |
| Patients with T2Ds and healthy controls | Plasma AAs | The ratios of ornithine/citrulline and proline/citrulline were 60% and 95% higher, respectively, in patients with diabetes than in controls. The plasma ornithine/arginine ratio was 36% higher in patients with diabetes, indicating increased arginase activity. | [ | |
| 3587 men and women(a case-cohort study) | Plasma AAs (phenylalanine, isoleucine, glutamine, leucine, alanine, tyrosine, histidine, and valine) | Phenylalanine was positively associated with the risk of macrovascular disease, while histidine was inversely associated; higher tyrosine and alanine levels were associated with decreased risk of microvascular disease. | [ | |
| Rats with experimental chronic renal failure | L-tryptophan levels and plasma concentrations in kidney, liver, lung, intestine, and spleen homogenates. | In animals with renal insufficiency, the plasma concentration and the content of l-tryptophan in homogenates of the kidney, liver, lung, intestine, and spleen were significantly decreased, while the plasma concentration and tissue levels of l-tryptophan metabolites in the kidney, liver, lung, intestine, spleen, and muscles were increased. | [ | |
| 859 patients with type 1 diabetes (baseline eGFR 30–75 mL/min/1.73 m2) | Plasma AAs | The patients showed decreased tryptophan/kynurenine, threonine, methionine, and tryptophan levels. | [ |
Legend: AA: Amino acid; EC: Endothelial cell; HiPSCs: Human induced pluripotent stem cells; Dia-hiPSCs: Diabetic human induced pluripotent stem cells; T2D: Type 2 diabetes.
Relationship between amino acids and hypertension.
| Risk Factor | Experimental Model | Amino Acids | Findings | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hypertension | 4288 participants aged 20–70 years without hypertension (3-year follow-up) | Dietary intakes of BCAAs (valine, leucine, and isoleucine) | Higher BCAA intake, particularly valine, is associated with a higher risk of incident hypertension. | [ |
| 8589 Japanese subjects | Plasma AAs | Higher intake of aromatic AAs is associated with s significantly higher risk of developing hypertension. | [ | |
| 4287 adults (41.9% men), aged 20–70 years. | Dietary intake of AAs | High dietary intake of Leu.Ser/Thr.Trp ratio is associated with a higher risk of incident hypertension. | [ | |
| 172 South African adolescents (105 girls, ages 13 to <18 years) | Circulating HCY concentrations | Of these adolescents, 40% had elevated BP, of whom 37% fell in the lowest and 38% in the highest HCY tertiles. | [ | |
| Normotensive or spontaneously hypertensive rats | L-Tyrosine, Tryptophan, Leucine, Isoleucine, Valine, Alanine, Arginine, and Aspartate | In spontaneously hypertensive rats, tyrosine (50 mg/kg) reduced BP by about 12 mmHg, while 200 mg/kg reduced BP by about 40 mmHg. Tryptophan injection (225 mg/kg) reduced BP in spontaneously hypertensive rats, but only by about half as much as an equivalent dose of tyrosine. Other AAs have no effect on BP. | [ | |
| Spontaneously hypertensive rat | L-tyrosine | Intraventricular injection of 15 micrograms of l-tyrosine results in a significantly lower BP in the spontaneously hypertensive rat. | [ | |
| 4680 persons aged 40–59 years from China, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the United States | Dietary AA (glutamic, proline, phenylalanine, serine, and cystine) | Dietary glutamic acid (percentage of total protein intake) was inversely related to BP. | [ |
Legend: BCAA: Branched-chain amino acid; AA: Amino acids; Leu: Leucine; Ser: Serine; Thr: Threonine; Trp: Tryptophan; BP: Blood pressure.
Relationship between amino acids and hypercholesterolemia.
| Risk Factors | Experimental Model | Amino Acids | Findings | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hypercholes | Hypercholesterolemic Wistar Rats | Liver AAs | A hypercholesterolemic diet resulted in decreased levels of glycine, serine, threonine, and histidine, and increased concentrations of asparagine and valine. | [ |
| Hypercholesterolemic Wistar Rats | Plasma AAs | A hypercholesterolemic diet led to a decrease in spermidine level and an increase in the level of the spermidine metabolites such as ornithine and spermidine. | [ |
Legend: AA: Amino acids.
Drugs that regulate amino acids homeostasis.
| Medication | Experimental Model | Amino Acids | Findings | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aspirin eugenol ester | Blood stasis in rat | Plasma AAs | AEE treatment showed a favorable inhibition of the increase of phenylalanine, isoleucine, valine, and tryptophan. | [ |
| Hyperlipidemic rat | Plasma and urine AAs | AEE inhibits hyperlipidemia by inhibiting the production of tyrosine metabolite, hydroxyphenyllactic acid, and tryptophan metabolite, xanthurenic acid. | [ | |
| Atherosclerotic hamster | Plasma and urine AAs | AEE promotes the TCA cycle and attenuates energy metabolism impairment by ameliorating blood lipid profile, reducing GLU and citric acid, as well as elevating the level of valine and leucine. | [ | |
| Hyperlipidemia hamster | Liver and feces | AEE may improve lipid and bile metabolism, and reduce oxidative stress and inflammation, which were all beneficial for hyperlipidemia treatment. | [ | |
| Folic acid | 126 patients with H-type hypertension | Serum HCY | After 3 months’ treatment with an FA dose adjusted according to methylene tetrahydrofolate reductase C677T genotype, HCY and ET-1/NO levels were significantly decreased in the intervention group and were lower than those after the first treatment phase and lower than in the control group ( | [ |
| Astragali Radix | Acute phase endothelial dysfunction induced by HCY | HCY | AR and ASP protected endothelium-dependent relaxation against acute injury from HCY through NO regulatory pathways, in which antioxidation played a key role. | [ |
| Low-dose DOX-induced toxicity rat model | Rat brain AAs | The levels of six AAs, including glutamate, glycine, serine, alanine, citrulline, and ornithine, correlated with brain oxidative damage caused by DOX and rescued by AR. | [ |
Legend: AA: Amino acids; AEE: Aspirin eugenol ester; TCA: Tricarboxylic acid cycle; GLU: Glutamic acid; HCY: Homocysteine; FA: Folic acid; ET-1: Endothelin-1; NO: Nitric oxide; AR: Astragali Radix; ASP: Astragalus saponin; DOX: Doxorubicin.
Clinical study on the regulation of endothelial function by AA.
| Amino | Experimental Model | Dose | TreatmentTime | Findings | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arginine | Stable CAD patients | 2 times/d (10 g/d) | 4 weeks | Oral l-arginine supplement improved EF and reduced LDL oxidation in stable CAD patients. | [ |
| Healthy young smokers | 3 times/d (21 g/d) | 3 days | Oral l-arginine improves EF and vascular elastic properties of the arterial tree during the acute phase of smoking. | [ | |
| Healthy male subjects | Intravenous l-arginine (10 g) | 20 min | FMD assessment leads to impairment of EF by inducing an increase in ADMA, which is reversed by l-arginine administration. | [ | |
| Healthy overweight adults with the HTW | 3 times/d (4.5 g/d) | 4 weeks | Supplementation with low-dose SR-arginine alleviates postprandial ED in healthy HTW adults when the baseline plasma arginine concentration is relatively low. | [ | |
| Patients with peripheral arterial disease | 50/100/500 mg l-arginine intra-arterially | once | Infusion of l-arginine increases blood flow and enhances the EF in diseased lower extremity human arteries. | [ | |
| Patients with heart failure | 20 g/day | 28 days | Oral administration with l-arginine was ineffective in influencing EF in these patients with heart failure. | [ | |
| Healthy males | 20 g/day | 28 days | Oral supplementation with l-arginine does not affect EF in normal healthy adults. | [ | |
| Healthy young males | 3 g | once | In healthy men, meal arginine only slightly enters the NO pathway and has no effect on basal EF. | [ | |
| Patients with intermittent claudication due to PAD | 3 g/day | 6 months | In patients with intermittent claudication and PAD, oral l-arginine was less effective. | [ | |
| Patients with severe malaria | 12 g | once | L-arginine infused at 12 g over 8 h was safe but did not improve lactate clearance or endothelial NO bioavailability | [ | |
| Patients with impaired glucose tolerance and metabolic syndrome | 6.4 g/day | 18 months | L-arginine increased the levels of EPCs and ADMA in subjects, suggesting that l-arginine can increase the expression levels of genes involved in metabolic and EF. | [ | |
| Patients with CSX | 0.125 g/min | 120 min | Acute l-arginine infusion increases NO availability, decreases endothelin-1 levels, and improves EF in CSX patients. | [ | |
| Clinically asymptomatic elderly subjects | 3 g/day | 3 weeks | Simvastatin does not enhance EF in subjects with elevated ADMA, but its combination with oral l-arginine improves EF in subjects with high ADMA. | [ | |
| Patients with cardiovascular disease previously submitted to an aortocoronary bypass | 6.4 g/day | 6 months | Long-term oral l-arginine improves EF, decrease ADMA levels, and ameliorates insulin sensitivity and glucose tolerance. | [ | |
| Taurine | Prehypertensive individuals | 1.6 g/day | 12 weeks | Long-term taurine supplementation exerts antihypertensive effects by improving vascular function. | [ |
| Asymptomatic male diabetics | 3 times/d (1.5 g/d) | 2 weeks | Taurine supplementation reverses early, detectable conduit vessel abnormalities in young male diabetics. | [ | |
| Healthy men | 3 g/day | 2 weeks | Taurine and Mg supplementation significantly increased EPC colony numbers and significantly decreased free radical levels in healthy men. | [ | |
| Healthy men | 6 g/day | 2 weeks | 2 weeks of taurine supplementation significantly increased vascular EF at rest. | [ | |
| Tyrosine | Young (25 ± 3 year) and older (72 ± 8 year) | 150 mg/kg | once | Tyrosine supplementation was found to improve the contractile response of skin vessels to cold stimuli. | [ |
| Citrulline | Healthy volunteers | 2 times/d (0.75/1.5/3 g) | 1 week | Oral l-citrulline supplementation raises plasma l-arginine concentration and augments NO-dependent signaling. | [ |
| Subjects with prehypertension | 2 times/d (l-citrulline/l-arginine: 1.35 g/0.65 g) | 6 weeks | WMJ supplementation improved aortic hemodynamics in middle-aged adults with prehypertension. | [ | |
| Acute hyperglycemia in healthy adults | WMJ (500 mL/day) | 2 weeks | WMJ supplementation improved FMD and microvascular function during acute hyperglycemia in healthy adults. | [ | |
| Leucine | Male volunteers | 25 g | once | Leucine administration prevents hyperglycaemia-mediated ED probably due to enhanced insulin secretion. | [ |
Legend: AA: Amino acid; CAD: Coronary artery disease; EF: Endothelial function; LDL: Low-density lipoprotein; FMD: Flow-mediated dilation; ADMA: Asymmetric dimethylarginine; SR: Sustained-release; ED: Endothelial dysfunction; HTW: Hypertriglyceridemic waist; NO: Nitric oxide; PAD: Peripheral arterial disease; Mg: Magnesium; EPC: Endothelial progenitor cell; CSX: Cardiac syndrome X; WMJ: Watermelon juice.