Cardiovascular disease risk factors induce mesenchymal features and senescence in mouse cardiac endothelial cells.
Karthik Amudhala HemanthakumarShentong FangAndrey AnisimovMikko I MäyränpääEero MervaalaRiikka KiveläPublished in: eLife (2021)
Aging, obesity, hypertension, and physical inactivity are major risk factors for endothelial dysfunction and cardiovascular disease (CVD). We applied fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS), RNA sequencing, and bioinformatic methods to investigate the common effects of CVD risk factors in mouse cardiac endothelial cells (ECs). Aging, obesity, and pressure overload all upregulated pathways related to TGF-β signaling and mesenchymal gene expression, inflammation, vascular permeability, oxidative stress, collagen synthesis, and cellular senescence, whereas exercise training attenuated most of the same pathways. We identified collagen chaperone Serpinh1 (also called as Hsp47) to be significantly increased by aging and obesity and repressed by exercise training. Mechanistic studies demonstrated that increased SERPINH1 in human ECs induced mesenchymal properties, while its silencing inhibited collagen deposition. Our data demonstrate that CVD risk factors significantly remodel the transcriptomic landscape of cardiac ECs inducing inflammatory, senescence, and mesenchymal features. SERPINH1 was identified as a potential therapeutic target in ECs.
Keyphrases
- endothelial cells
- risk factors
- high glucose
- oxidative stress
- cardiovascular disease
- single cell
- insulin resistance
- bone marrow
- stem cells
- type diabetes
- metabolic syndrome
- weight loss
- gene expression
- high fat diet induced
- left ventricular
- weight gain
- diabetic rats
- skeletal muscle
- vascular endothelial growth factor
- dna damage
- rna seq
- heat shock protein
- blood pressure
- dna methylation
- wound healing
- mental health
- physical activity
- cell therapy
- electronic health record
- adipose tissue
- tissue engineering
- cardiovascular risk factors
- body mass index
- transforming growth factor
- heart failure
- climate change
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- stress induced
- human health
- drug induced
- deep learning
- heat stress
- risk assessment
- single molecule