Project Details
Description
Project Summary
Atherosclerosis, the main underlying cause of death worldwide, is characterized by chronic inflammation and
accumulation of lipids in the arterial wall. Excessive lipid accumulation by macrophages (MΦs) and vascular
smooth muscle cells (SMCs) plays a key role in the initiation and progression of atherosclerosis. It is generally
accepted that atherosclerosis arise from LDL modification in the arterial wall and its subsequent internalization
by MΦs and SMCs through a variety of scavenger receptors. The role of scavenger receptor-independent lipid
uptake in atherosclerosis, the physiological factors stimulating this process, and the signaling mechanisms
involved remain poorly characterized. We reported that matrix protein thrombospondin-1 (TSP1) stimulates
direct, scavenger receptor-independent uptake of unmodified, native LDL (nLDL) in MΦs. TSP1 via its cognate
receptor CD47 activates actin-binding protein cofilin, leading to macropinocytosis of nLDL, and excessive
cholesterol accumulation. The signaling mechanisms downstream of CD47 that stimulate macropinocytosis are
unknown. Although phospholipase C (PLC) and slingshot phosphatase 1 (SSH1) have been shown to activate
cofilin, their roles in TSP1-induced macropinocytosis have not yet been investigated. Moreover, the ability of
TSP1-CD47 signaling to stimulate MΦ macropinocytosis in atherosclerotic vessels in vivo and the significance
of lipid macropinocytosis in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis remain to be determined. Our novel preliminary
data show that TSP1 and CD47 knockout mice are protected from atherosclerosis and the macropinocytosis
inhibitor EIPA decreases atherosclerotic lesion formation in hypercholesterolemic mice. We hypothesize that
TSP1 via CD47 promotes lipid macropinocytosis in the arterial wall, contributing to lipid accumulation and the
pathogenesis of atherosclerosis. The hypothesis will be tested via the following aims: (1) examining for the first
time whether CD47 receptor signaling in MΦs stimulates macropinocytosis via PLC- and SSH1-mediated cofilin
activation and contributes to atherosclerosis development; (2) exploring whether MΦs internalize lipoproteins via
macropinocytosis in atherosclerotic arteries in vivo and that deletion of NHE1 (major target of EIPA) specifically
in MΦs attenuates atherosclerosis, and (3) investigating whether TSP1 binding to CD47 stimulates
macropinocytosis in MΦ-like SMCs via Nox1-mediated cofilin activation. The proposal will employ global and
cell-specific knockout mice, and other genetic tools to test the hypothesis. Specific targeting of CD47 via multiple
approaches (antibody blockade, siRNA/morpholino silencing, and CD47 activating peptide sequences) will
provide confirmation of results obtained in genetic mutants. Multiple complementary techniques will be used to
study macropinocytosis in vitro (pharmacological, genetic, fluorescence/high-resolution microscopy) and in vivo
(cofilin mutants, AngioSPARK 680, MΦ-specific NHE1 knockouts). This innovative proposal has the potential to
reveal important new mechanisms of lipid internalization and provide a paradigm shift in our knowledge about
how atherosclerosis develops.
| Status | Finished |
|---|---|
| Effective start/end date | 7/1/18 → 5/31/23 |
Funding
- National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute: $381,250.00
- National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute: $384,687.00
- National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute: $385,000.00
- National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute: $381,250.00
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