Abstract

Vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) develop a highly proliferative and synthetic phenotype in arterial diseases. Because such phenotypic changes are likely integrated with the energetic state of the cell, we hypothesized that changes in cellular metabolism regulate VSMC plasticity. VSMCs were exposed to platelet-derived growth factor-BB (PDGF) and changes in mitochondrial morphology, proliferation, contractile protein expression, and mitochondrial metabolism were examined. Exposure of VSMCs to PDGF resulted in mitochondrial fragmentation and a 50% decrease in the abundance of mitofusin 2. Synthetic VSMCs demonstrated a 20% decrease in glucose oxidation, which was accompanied by an increase in fatty acid oxidation. Results of mitochondrial function assays in permeabilized cells showed few changes due to PDGF treatment in mitochondrial respiratory chain capacity and coupling. Treatment of VSMCs with Mdivi-1—an inhibitor of mitochondrial fission—inhibited PDGF-induced mitochondrial fragmentation by 50% and abolished increases in cell proliferation; however, it failed to prevent PDGF-mediated activation of autophagy and removal of contractile proteins. In addition, treatment with Mdivi-1 reversed changes in fatty acid and glucose oxidation associated with the synthetic phenotype. These results suggest that changes in mitochondrial morphology and bioenergetics underlie the hyperproliferative features of the synthetic VSMC phenotype, but do not affect the degradation of contractile proteins. Mitochondrial fragmentation occurring during the transition to the synthetic phenotype could be a therapeutic target for hyperproliferative vascular disorders.

Highlights

  • Vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) are essential in regulating vessel tone and blood flow [1]

  • VSMCs were serum-starved for 24 h followed by treatment with platelet-derived growth factor-BB (PDGF) or vehicle

  • These results suggest that exposure of VSMCs to PDGF results in remarkable mitochondrial remodeling in the absence of gross changes in mitochondrial abundance

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Summary

Introduction

Vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) are essential in regulating vessel tone and blood flow [1] In vascular diseases such as atherosclerosis or after percutaneous coronary interventions, VSMCs lose their contractile function and convert to a highly proliferative phenotype capable of producing elevated levels of extracellular matrix. This VSMC phenotype, typically described as the synthetic phenotype, can dramatically affect the composition and stability of vascular lesions, or, in the case of restenosis, promote vessel occlusion [2,3,4,5,6,7].

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