1. Microvasculopathy, Luminal Calcification and Premature Aging in Fetuin-A Deficient Mice
- Author
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Anne Babler, Rafael Kramann, Irina Moshkova, Felix Gremse, Marietta Herrmann, Ulrike Kusebauch, Willi Jahnen-Dechent, Robert L. Moritz, Fabian Kiessling, Marc D. McKee, and Valentin Nelea
- Subjects
Premature aging ,0303 health sciences ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Kidney ,Chemistry ,Spleen ,Histology ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,medicine.disease ,Fetuin ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Fibrosis ,Brown adipose tissue ,medicine ,030304 developmental biology ,Calcification - Abstract
ObjectiveThe plasma protein fetuin-A mediates the formation of protein-mineral colloids known as calciprotein particles (CPP) – rapid clearance of these CPP by the reticuloendothelial system prevents errant mineral precipitation and therefore ectopic mineralization (calcification). The mutant mouse strain D2,Ahsg-/- combines fetuin-A deficiency with the mineralization-prone DBA/2 genetic background, having a particularly severe compound phenotype of microvascular and soft tissue mineralization. Here we studied mechanisms leading to soft tissue mineralization, organ damage and premature aging in these mice.Approach and ResultsWe analyzed mice longitudinally by echocardiography, X-ray-computed tomography, analytical electron microscopy, histology, mass spectrometry proteomics, and genome-wide microarray-based expression analyses of D2 wildtype and Ahsg-/- mice.Fetuin-A deficient mice had calcified lesions in myocardium, lung, brown adipose tissue, reproductive organs, spleen, pancreas, kidney and the skin, associated with reduced growth, cardiac output and premature aging. Importantly, early stage calcified lesions presented in the lumen of the microvasculature suggesting precipitation of mineral containing complexes from the fluid phase of blood. Genome-wide expression analysis of calcified lesions and surrounding (not calcified) tissue, together with morphological observations, indicated that the ectopic mineralization was not associated with osteochondrogenic cell differentiation, but rather with thrombosis and fibrosis.ConclusionsCollectively, these results demonstrate that pathological mineralization can start by intravascular mineral deposition causing microvasculopathy, which impacts on growth, organ function and survival. Our study underscores the importance of fetuin-A and related systemic regulators of mineralized matrix metabolism to prevent cardiovascular disease, especially in dysregulated mineral homeostasis.
- Published
- 2019
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