Smooth muscle mineralocorticoid receptor as an epigenetic regulator of vascular ageing

Author:

Ibarrola Jaime1ORCID,Kim Seung Kyum12ORCID,Lu Qing1ORCID,DuPont Jennifer J1ORCID,Creech Amanda3,Sun Zhe4,Hill Michael A4ORCID,Jaffe Jacob D3ORCID,Jaffe Iris Z1

Affiliation:

1. Molecular Cardiology Research Institute, Tufts Medical Center , 800 Washington Street, Box 80, Boston, MA 02111 , USA

2. Department of Sports Science, Seoul National University of Science and Technology , 232 Gongneung-ro, Nowon-gu, 01811 Republic of Korea, Seoul, South Korea

3. Broad Institute, Proteomics Platform , Cambridge, MA 02142 , USA

4. Department of Medical Pharmacology and Physiology, Dalton Cardiovascular Research Center, University of Missouri , Columbia, MO 65203 , USA

Abstract

Abstract Aims Vascular stiffness increases with age and independently predicts cardiovascular disease risk. Epigenetic changes, including histone modifications, accumulate with age but the global pattern has not been elucidated nor are the regulators known. Smooth muscle cell-mineralocorticoid receptor (SMC-MR) contributes to vascular stiffness in ageing mice. Thus, we investigated the regulatory role of SMC-MR in vascular epigenetics and stiffness. Methods and results Mass spectrometry-based proteomic profiling of all histone modifications completely distinguished 3 from 12-month-old mouse aortas. Histone-H3 lysine-27 (H3K27) methylation (me) significantly decreased in ageing vessels and this was attenuated in SMC-MR-KO littermates. Immunoblotting revealed less H3K27-specific methyltransferase EZH2 with age in MR-intact but not SMC-MR-KO vessels. These ageing changes were examined in primary human aortic (HA)SMC from adult vs. aged donors. MR, H3K27 acetylation (ac), and stiffness gene (connective tissue growth factor, integrin-α5) expression significantly increased, while H3K27me and EZH2 decreased, with age. MR inhibition reversed these ageing changes in HASMC and the decline in stiffness genes was prevented by EZH2 blockade. Atomic force microscopy revealed that MR antagonism decreased intrinsic stiffness and the probability of fibronectin adhesion of aged HASMC. Conversely, ageing induction in young HASMC with H2O2; increased MR, decreased EZH2, enriched H3K27ac and MR at stiffness gene promoters by chromatin immunoprecipitation, and increased stiffness gene expression. In 12-month-old mice, MR antagonism increased aortic EZH2 and H3K27 methylation, increased EZH2 recruitment and decreased H3K27ac at stiffness genes promoters, and prevented ageing-induced vascular stiffness and fibrosis. Finally, in human aortic tissue, age positively correlated with MR and stiffness gene expression and negatively correlated with H3K27me3 while MR and EZH2 are negatively correlated. Conclusion These data support a novel vascular ageing model with rising MR in human SMC suppressing EZH2 expression thereby decreasing H3K27me, promoting MR recruitment and H3K27ac at stiffness gene promoters to induce vascular stiffness and suggests new targets for ameliorating ageing-associated vascular disease.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology

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