Affiliation:
1. Vascular Biology Section (E.B., S.S.P.D.L., Y.T., H.L., Y.H., Y.W., P.M.S., X.Y., J.B.G., X.W., J.H., F.S.), Department of Medicine, Boston University Chobenian & Avedisian School of Medicine, MA.
2. Renal Section (V.C.), Department of Medicine, Boston University Chobenian & Avedisian School of Medicine, MA.
Abstract
BACKGROUND:
Thoracic aortic aneurysms (TAAs) are abnormal aortic dilatations and a major cardiovascular complication of Marfan syndrome. We previously demonstrated a critical role for vascular smooth muscle (VSM) SirT1 (sirtuin-1), a lysine deacetylase, against maladaptive aortic remodeling associated with chronic oxidative stress and aberrant activation of MMPs (matrix metalloproteinases).
METHODS:
In this study, we investigated whether redox dysregulation of SirT1 contributed to the pathogenesis of TAA using fibrillin-1 hypomorphic mice (Fbn1
mgR/mgR
), an established model of Marfan syndrome prone to aortic dissection/rupture.
RESULTS:
Oxidative stress markers 3-nitrotyrosine and 4-hydroxynonenal were significantly elevated in aortas of patients with Marfan syndrome. Moreover, reversible oxidative post-translational modifications (rOPTM) of protein cysteines, particularly S-glutathionylation, were dramatically increased in aortas of Fbn1
mgR/mgR
mice, before induction of severe oxidative stress markers. Fbn1
mgR/mgR
aortas and VSM cells exhibited an increase in rOPTM of SirT1, coinciding with the upregulation of acetylated proteins, an index of decreased SirT1 activity, and increased MMP2/9 activity. Mechanistically, we demonstrated that TGFβ (transforming growth factor beta), which was increased in Fbn1
mgR/mgR
aortas, stimulated rOPTM of SirT1, decreasing its deacetylase activity in VSM cells. VSM cell–specific deletion of SirT1 in Fbn1
mgR/mgR
mice (SMKO-Fbn1
mgR/mgR
) caused a dramatic increase in aortic MMP2 expression and worsened TAA progression, leading to aortic rupture in 50% of SMKO-Fbn1
mgR/mgR
mice, compared with 25% of Fbn1
mgR/mgR
mice. rOPTM of SirT1, rOPTM-mediated inhibition of SirT1 activity, and increased MMP2/9 activity were all exacerbated by the deletion of Glrx (glutaredoxin-1), a specific deglutathionylation enzyme, while being corrected by overexpression of Glrx or of an oxidation-resistant SirT1 mutant in VSM cells.
CONCLUSIONS:
Our novel findings strongly suggest a causal role of S-glutathionylation of SirT1 in the pathogenesis of TAA. Prevention or reversal of SirT1 rOPTM may be a novel therapeutic strategy to prevent TAA and TAA dissection/ruptures in individuals with Marfan syndrome, for which, thus far, no targeted therapy has been developed.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Cited by
3 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献