Publication
Title
Defective autophagy in vascular smooth muscle cells alters vascular reactivity of the mouse femoral artery
Author
Abstract
Autophagy is an important cellular survival process that enables degradation and recycling of defective organelles and proteins to maintain cellular homeostasis. Hence, defective autophagy plays a role in many age-associated diseases, such as atherosclerosis, arterial stiffening and hypertension. Recently, we showed in mice that autophagy in vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) of large elastic arteries such as the aorta is important for Ca(2+)mobilization and vascular reactivity. Whether autophagy plays a role in the smaller muscular arteries, such as the femoral artery, and thereby contributes to for example, blood pressure regulation is currently unknown. Therefore, we determined vascular reactivity of femoral artery segments of mice containing a VSMC specific deletion of the essential autophagy gene Atg7 (Atg7(F/F)SM22 alpha-Cre(+)) and compared them to femoral artery segments of corresponding control mice (Atg7(+/+)SM22 alpha-Cre(+)). Our results indicate that similar to the aorta, femoral artery segments showed enhanced contractility. Specifically, femoral artery segments of Atg7(F/F)SM22 alpha-Cre(+)mice showed an increase in phasic phenylephrine (PE) induced contractions, together with an enhanced sensitivity to depolarization induced contractions. In addition, and importantly, VSMC sensitivity to exogenous nitric oxide (NO) was significantly increased in femoral artery segments of Atg7(F/F)SM22 alpha-Cre(+)mice. Notwithstanding the fact that small artery contractility is a significant pathophysiological determinant for the development of hypertension, 7 days of treatment with angiotensin II (AngII), which increased systolic blood pressure in control mice, was ineffective in Atg7(F/F)SM22 alpha-Cre(+)mice. It is likely that this was due to the increased sensitivity of VSMCs to NO in the femoral artery, although changes in the heart upon AngII treatment were also present, which could also be (partially) accountable for the lack of an AngII-induced rise in blood pressure in Atg7(F/F)SM22 alpha-Cre(+)mice. Overall, our study indicates that apart from previously shown effects on large elastic arteries, VSMC autophagy also plays a pivotal role in the regulation of the contractile and relaxing properties of the smaller muscular arteries. This may suggest a role for autophagy in vascular pathologies, such as hypertension and arterial stiffness.
Language
English
Source (journal)
Frontiers in physiology / Frontiers Research Foundation (Lausanne, Switzerland) - [Lausanne], 2010, currens
Publication
[Lausanne] : Frontiers Research Foundation , 2020
ISSN
1664-042X
DOI
10.3389/FPHYS.2020.548943
Volume/pages
11 (2020) , 11 p.
Article Reference
548943
ISI
000575478600001
Pubmed ID
33071811
Medium
E-only publicatie
Full text (Publisher's DOI)
Full text (open access)
UAntwerpen
Faculty/Department
Research group
Project info
Infla-Med: Fundamental and translational research into targets for the treatment of inflammatory diseases.
Arterial stiffening as a common pathophysiological mechanism in cardiac and kidney failure and brain degeneration.
Pharmacological modulation of autophagy in vascular disease.
Publication type
Subject
Affiliation
Publications with a UAntwerp address
External links
Web of Science
Record
Identifier
Creation 30.10.2020
Last edited 08.12.2024
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