Calciprotein Particles Induce Cellular Compartment-Specific Proteome Alterations in Human Arterial Endothelial Cells.
Daria K ShishkovaArseniy A LobovEgor RepkinVictoria E MarkovaYulia MarkovaAnna V TsepokinaMaxim SinitskyEgor KondratievEvgenia TorgunakovaAnton G KutikhinPublished in: Journal of cardiovascular development and disease (2023)
Calciprotein particles (CPPs) are indispensable scavengers of excessive Ca 2+ and PO 4 3- ions in blood, being internalised and recycled by liver and spleen macrophages, monocytes, and endothelial cells (ECs). Here, we performed a pathway enrichment analysis of cellular compartment-specific proteomes in primary human coronary artery ECs (HCAEC) and human internal thoracic artery ECs (HITAEC) treated with primary (amorphous) or secondary (crystalline) CPPs (CPP-P and CPPs, respectively). Exposure to CPP-P and CPP-S induced notable upregulation of: (1) cytokine- and chemokine-mediated signaling, Ca 2+ -dependent events, and apoptosis in cytosolic and nuclear proteomes; (2) H + and Ca 2+ transmembrane transport, generation of reactive oxygen species, mitochondrial outer membrane permeabilisation, and intrinsic apoptosis in the mitochondrial proteome; (3) oxidative, calcium, and endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress, unfolded protein binding, and apoptosis in the ER proteome. In contrast, transcription, post-transcriptional regulation, translation, cell cycle, and cell-cell adhesion pathways were underrepresented in cytosol and nuclear compartments, whilst biosynthesis of amino acids, mitochondrial translation, fatty acid oxidation, pyruvate dehydrogenase activity, and energy generation were downregulated in the mitochondrial proteome of CPP-treated ECs. Differentially expressed organelle-specific pathways were coherent in HCAEC and HITAEC and between ECs treated with CPP-P or CPP-S. Proteomic analysis of mitochondrial and nuclear lysates from CPP-treated ECs confirmed bioinformatic filtration findings.
Keyphrases
- endothelial cells
- oxidative stress
- high glucose
- cell cycle
- endoplasmic reticulum
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- coronary artery
- diabetic rats
- cell cycle arrest
- cell death
- fatty acid
- cell adhesion
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- computed tomography
- magnetic resonance
- pluripotent stem cells
- newly diagnosed
- room temperature
- pulmonary artery
- spinal cord
- magnetic resonance imaging
- poor prognosis
- dendritic cells
- cell therapy
- nitric oxide
- mesenchymal stem cells
- hydrogen peroxide
- weight loss
- bone marrow
- estrogen receptor