Abstract

Vascular calcification impairs vessel compliance and increases the risk of cardiovascular events. We found previously that liver X receptor agonists, which regulate intracellular cholesterol homeostasis, augment PKA agonist- or high phosphate-induced osteogenic differentiation of vascular smooth muscle cells. Because cholesterol is an integral component of the matrix vesicles that nucleate calcium mineral, we examined the role of cellular cholesterol metabolism in vascular cell mineralization. The results showed that vascular smooth muscle cells isolated from LDL receptor null (Ldlr(-/-)) mice, which have impaired cholesterol uptake, had lower levels of intracellular cholesterol and less osteogenic differentiation, as indicated by alkaline phosphatase activity and matrix mineralization, compared with WT cells. PKA activation with forskolin acutely induced genes that promote cholesterol uptake (LDL receptor) and biosynthesis (HMG-CoA reductase). In WT cells, inhibition of cholesterol uptake by lipoprotein-deficient serum attenuated forskolin-induced matrix mineralization, which was partially reversed by the addition of cell-permeable cholesterol. Prolonged activation of both uptake and biosynthesis pathways by cotreatment with a liver X receptor agonist further augmented forskolin-induced matrix mineralization. Inhibition of either cholesterol uptake, using Ldlr(-/-) cells, or of cholesterol biosynthesis, using mevastatin-treated WT cells, failed to inhibit matrix mineralization due to up-regulation of the respective compensatory pathway. Inhibition of both pathways simultaneously using mevastatin-treated Ldlr(-/-) cells did inhibit forskolin-induced matrix mineralization. Altogether, the results suggest that up-regulation of cholesterol metabolism is essential for matrix mineralization by vascular cells.

Highlights

  • Because cholesterol content is greater in matrix vesicles than in the cytoplasm [14], vesicle production may drain the cell of its cholesterol stores, unless cholesterol synthesis is up-regulated

  • We found that cholesterol metabolism plays an important role in vascular cell mineralization

  • The differentiation activator forskolin acutely up-regulated genes involved in both cholesterol uptake and biosynthesis

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Summary

Role of Cellular Cholesterol Metabolism in Vascular Cell Calcification*

We found previously that liver X receptor agonists, which regulate intracellular cholesterol homeostasis, augment PKA agonist- or high phosphateinduced osteogenic differentiation of vascular smooth muscle cells. We found that activation of liver X receptor (LXR), which up-regulates the expression of genes involved in cholesterol efflux [23, 24], augments PKA- and high phosphate-induced mineralization of VSMCs [21, 25]. Consistent with these findings, inhibition of LXR by the dominant-negative form of LXR␣ and/or LXR␤ inhibits mineralization of VSMCs [21]. Cholesterol Metabolism in Vascular Cell Calcification and uptake of cholesterol are essential to the mineralization of vascular cells

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
Demer and Yin Tintut
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