Abstract
The clearance of apoptotic cell debris, containing professional phagocytosis and non-professional phagocytosis, is essential for maintaining the homeostasis of healthy tissues. Here, we discovered that endothelial cells could engulf apoptotic cell debris in atherosclerotic plaque. Single-cell RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) has revealed a unique endothelial cell subpopulation in atherosclerosis, which was strongly associated with vascular injury-related pathways. Moreover, integrated analysis of three vascular injury-related RNA-seq datasets showed that the expression of scavenger receptor class B type 1 (SR-B1) was up-regulated and specifically enriched in the phagocytosis pathway under vascular injury circumstances. Single-cell RNA-seq and bulk RNA-seq indicate that SR-B1 was highly expressed in a unique endothelial cell subpopulation of mouse aorta and strongly associated with the reorganization of cellular adherent junctions and cytoskeleton which were necessary for phagocytosis. Furthermore, SR-B1 was strongly required for endothelial cells to engulf apoptotic cell debris in atherosclerotic plaque of both mouse and human aorta. Overall, this study demonstrated that apoptotic cell debris could be engulfed by endothelial cells through SR-B1 and associated with the reorganization of cellular adherent junctions and cytoskeleton.
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