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Ferroptotic stress facilitates smooth muscle cell dedifferentiation in arterial remodelling by disrupting mitochondrial homeostasis

Authors :
Qing-Xin Ji
Fei-Yan Zeng
Jian Zhou
Wen-Bin Wu
Xu-Jie Wang
Zhen Zhang
Guo-Yan Zhang
Jie Tong
Di-Yang Sun
Jia-Bao Zhang
Wen-Xiang Cao
Fu-Ming Shen
Jin-Jian Lu
Dong-Jie Li
Pei Wang
Source :
Cell death and differentiation.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Smooth muscle cell (SMC) phenotypic switch from a quiescent 'contractile' phenotype to a dedifferentiated and proliferative state underlies the development of cardiovascular diseases (CVDs); however, our understanding of the mechanism is still incomplete. In the present study, we explored the potential role of ferroptosis, a novel nonapoptotic form of cell death, in SMC phenotypic switch and related neointimal formation. We found that ferroptotic stress was triggered in cultured dedifferentiated SMCs and arterial neointimal tissue of wire-injured mice. Moreover, pro-ferroptosis stress was activated in arterial neointimal tissue of clinical patients who underwent carotid endarterectomy. Blockade of ferroptotic stress via administration of a pharmacological inhibitor or by global genetic overexpression of glutathione peroxidase-4 (GPX4), a well-established anti-ferroptosis molecule, delayed SMC phenotype switch and arterial remodelling. Conditional SMC-specific gene delivery of GPX4 using adreno-associated virus in the carotid artery inhibited ferroptosis and prevented neointimal formation. Conversely, ferroptosis stress directly triggered dedifferentiation of SMCs. Transcriptomics analysis demonstrated that inhibition of ferroptotic stress mainly targets the mitochondrial respiratory chain and oxidative phosphorylation. Mechanistically, ferroptosis inhibition corrected the disrupted mitochondrial homeostasis in dedifferentiated SMCs, including enhanced mitochondrial ROS production, dysregulated mitochondrial dynamics, and mitochondrial hyperpolarization, and ultimately inhibited SMC phenotypic switch and growth. Copper-diacetyl-bis

Subjects

Subjects :
Cell Biology
Molecular Biology

Details

ISSN :
14765403
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cell death and differentiation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....dcc910f611f55a2e6c462223b491d55c