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Submitted on May 14, 2007
Revised on March 25, 2008
Accepted on March 26, 2008
From the Cardiovascular Division (M.M., A.Z., A.S., U.M., X.Y., Y.H., Q.X.), King's College, London; Department of Cardiac and Vascular Sciences (A.I.D.S.) and Department of Basic Medical Sciences (Y.-L.C.), St. George's, University of London, United Kingdom; Cancer Research UK Cambridge Research Institute (J.R.G., B.M.), United Kingdom; and Gaubius Laboratory and Leiden University Medical Center (P.H.Q.), The Netherlands.
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: manuel.mayr{at}kcl.ac.uk.
We have recently demonstrated that stem cell antigen 1–positive (Sca-1+) progenitors exist in the vascular adventitia of apolipoprotein E–deficient (apoE-/-) mice and contribute to smooth muscle cell (SMC) accumulation in vein graft atherosclerosis. Using a combined proteomic and metabolomic approach, we now characterize these local progenitors, which participate in the formation of native atherosclerotic lesions in chow-fed apoE-/- mice. Unlike Sca-1+ progenitors from embryonic stem cells, the resident Sca-1+ stem cell population from the vasculature acquired a mature aortic SMC phenotype after platelet-derived growth factor-BB stimulation. It shared proteomic and metabolomic characteristics of apoE-/- SMCs, which were clearly distinct from wild-type SMCs under normoxic and hypoxic conditions. Among the differentially expressed proteins were key enzymes in glucose metabolism, resulting in faster glucose consumption and a compensatory reduction in baseline interleukin-6 secretion. The latter was associated with a marked upregulation of insulin-like growth factor binding proteins (IGFBPs) 3 and 6. Notably, reconstitution of interleukin-6 to levels measured in the conditioned medium of wild-type SMCs attenuated the elevated IGFBP expression in apoE-/- SMCs and their vascular progenitors. This coregulation of apoE, interleukin-6, and IGFBPs was replicated in wild-type SMCs from hypercholesterolemic mice and confirmed by silencing apoE expression in SMCs from normocholesterolemic mice. In summary, we provide evidence that Sca-1+ progenitors contribute to native atherosclerosis in apoE-/- mice, that apoE deficiency and hypercholesterolemia alter progenitor cell behavior, and that inflammatory cytokines such as interleukin-6 act as metabolic regulators in SMCs of hyperlipidemic mice.
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