Abstract

Advancing age is the primary risk factor for the development of cardiovascular diseases (CVD), driven largely by age-related arterial dysfunction. Two key manifestations of arterial dysfunction with advancing age are aortic stiffening and vascular endothelial dysfunction. Excessive reactive oxygen species (ROS)-induced oxidative stress is a major macro-mechanistic process causing arterial dysfunction during aging; however, the upstream mechanistic event(s) driving oxidative stress are incompletely understood. A rapidly emerging candidate is cellular senescence, a state of irreversible cell-cycle arrest that can be cleared with senolytics. Purpose We tested the hypotheses that late-life treatment with the senolytic ABT-263 (ABT) would: 1) reverse age-related aortic stiffening by reducing aortic intrinsic mechanical wall stiffness (elastic modulus [EM]); and 2) increase endothelial function by increasing nitric oxide (NO) bioavailability and reducing oxidative stress. Methods Old (27 mo) male C57BL6/N mice were treated with vehicle ([V]; 10% EtOH, 30% PEG400 and 60% Phosal 50 PG; n = 7) or ABT (50 mg/kg/day in [V]; n = 6) by oral gavage using a 1 week on – 2 weeks off – 1 week on dosing paradigm. A cohort of young adult mice (6 mo; n = 5) served as a young control (YC) reference group. Aortic pulse wave velocity (PWV), an in vivo measure of aortic stiffness, was measured pre- and post-treatment. Aortic elastic modulus was assessed by performing stress-strain testing in excised aortic rings. Endothelial function was assessed via ex vivo carotid artery endothelial-dependent dilation (EDD) with increasing concentrations of acetylcholine (ACh). NO bioavailability (ACh in the presence of the NO-synthase inhibitor, L-NAME) and the role of excessive ROS in regulating EDD (ACh with the addition of the ROS scavenger, TEMPOL) were assessed as potential mechanisms. Results Aortic stiffness. ABT reversed aortic PWV in old mice (pre: 456 ± 7 vs post: 375 ± 11 cm/sec, P = 0.0003), to levels of YC (348 ± 13 cm/sec; P = 0.14 vs. ABT), whereas no effect was observed in the [V]-treated group. Reduced aortic PWV with ABT was accompanied by lower aortic EM (V: 2738 ± 152 kPa, ABT: 2228 ± 155 kPa, YC: 2120 ± 362 kPa; P = 0.03). Endothelial function. ABT-treated mice had greater peak EDD relative to [V]-treated animals and comparable to YC (ABT: 94 ± 3% vs. V: 78 ± 5%, P = 0.01; YC: 91 ±2). Group differences in peak EDD were abolished in the presence of L-NAME, suggesting that ABT rescued EDD by restoring NO bioavailability. TEMPOL restored peak EDD in [V]-treated old mice to YC levels (92 ±5%, P = 0.003 vs. ACh alone), while having no effect in ABT or YC animals, suggesting that ABT selectively ameliorated the tonic ROS-related suppression of EDD with aging. Conclusion Cellular senescence is mechanistically implicated in age-related arterial dysfunction, and treatment with the senolytic compound ABT-263 may be a therapeutic strategy for improving arterial function, with the potential for reducing CVD risk with aging.

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