Preventing Cholesterol-Induced Perk (Protein Kinase RNA-Like Endoplasmic Reticulum Kinase) Signaling in Smooth Muscle Cells Blocks Atherosclerotic Plaque Formation

Author:

Chattopadhyay Abhijnan1ORCID,Guan Pujun12,Majumder Suravi1ORCID,Kaw Kaveeta1ORCID,Zhou Zhen1,Zhang Chen34,Prakash Siddharth K.1ORCID,Kaw Anita1ORCID,Buja L. Maximillian5,Kwartler Callie S.1ORCID,Milewicz Dianna M.1

Affiliation:

1. Division of Medical Genetics, Department of Internal Medicine, McGovern Medical School The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (A.C., P.G., S.M., K.K., Z.Z., S.K.P.‚ A.K., C.S.K., D.M.M.).

2. Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center and UTHealth, Houston (P.G.).

3. Division of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Michael E. DeBakey Department of Surgery, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX (C.Z.).

4. Department of Cardiovascular Surgery, Texas Heart Institute, Houston (C.Z.).

5. Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (L.M.B.).

Abstract

Background: Vascular smooth muscle cells (SMCs) undergo complex phenotypic modulation with atherosclerotic plaque formation in hyperlipidemic mice, which is characterized by de-differentiation and heterogeneous increases in the expression of macrophage, fibroblast, osteogenic, and stem cell markers. An increase of cellular cholesterol in SMCs triggers similar phenotypic changes in vitro with exposure to free cholesterol due to cholesterol entering the endoplasmic reticulum, triggering endoplasmic reticulum stress and activating Perk (protein kinase RNA-like endoplasmic reticulum kinase) signaling. Methods: We generated an SMC-specific Perk knockout mouse model, induced hyperlipidemia in the mice by AAV- PCSK9 DY injection, and subjected them to a high-fat diet. We then assessed atherosclerotic plaque formation and performed single-cell transcriptomic studies using aortic tissue from these mice. Results: SMC-specific deletion of Perk reduces atherosclerotic plaque formation in male hyperlipidemic mice by 80%. Single-cell transcriptomic data identify 2 clusters of modulated SMCs in hyperlipidemic mice, one of which is absent when Perk is deleted in SMCs. The 2 modulated SMC clusters have significant overlap of transcriptional changes, but the Perk-dependent cluster uniquely shows a global decrease in the number of transcripts. SMC-specific Perk deletion also prevents migration of both contractile and modulated SMCs from the medial layer of the aorta. Conclusions: Our results indicate that hypercholesterolemia drives both Perk-dependent and Perk-independent SMC modulation and that deficiency of Perk significantly blocks atherosclerotic plaque formation.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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