Abstract
AbstractPlaque smooth muscle cells are critical players in the initiation and advancement of atherosclerotic disease. They produce extracellular matrix (ECM) components, which play a role in lesion progression and stabilization. Despite clear phenotypic differences between plaque smooth muscle cells and vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs), VSMCs are still widely used as a model system in atherosclerotic research.Here we present a conditioned outgrowth method to isolate plaque smooth muscle cells. We obtained plaque cells from 27 donors (24 carotid and 3 femoral endarterectomies). We show that these cells keep their proliferative capacity for eight passages, are transcriptionally stable, retain donor-specific gene expression programs, and express extracellular matrix proteins (FN1, COL1A1, DCN) and smooth muscle cell markers (ACTA2, MYH11, CNN1).Single-cell transcriptomics of plaque tissue and cultured cells reveals that cultured plaque cells closely resemble the myofibroblast fraction of plaque smooth muscle cells. Chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing (ChIP-seq) shows the presence of histone H3 lysine 4 dimethylation (H3K4me2) at theMYH11promoter, pointing to their smooth muscle cell origin. Finally, we demonstrated that plaque cells can be efficiently transduced (>97%) and are capable to take up oxidized LDL (oxLDL) and undergo calcification.In conclusion, we present a method to isolate and culture primary human plaque cells that retain plaque myofibroblast-like cells’ phenotypical and functional capabilities - making them a suitablein vitromodel for studying selected mechanisms of atherosclerosis.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory