Clonally expanding smooth muscle cells promote atherosclerosis by escaping efferocytosis and activating the complement cascade
Author(s) -
Ying Wang,
Vivek Nanda,
Daniel DiRenzo,
Jianqin Ye,
Sophia Xiao,
Yoko Kojima,
Kathryn L. Howe,
Kai-Uwe Jarr,
Alyssa M. Flores,
Pavlos Tsantilas,
Noah L. Tsao,
Abhiram Rao,
Alexandra Newman,
Anne V. Eberhard,
James R. Priest,
Arno Ruusalepp,
Gerard Pasterkamp,
Lars Mäegdefessel,
Clint L. Miller,
Lars Lind,
Simon Koplev,
Johan Björkegren,
Gary K. Owens,
Erik Ingelsson,
Irving L. Weissman,
Nicholas J. Leeper
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
proceedings of the national academy of sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.011
H-Index - 771
eISSN - 1091-6490
pISSN - 0027-8424
DOI - 10.1073/pnas.2006348117
Subject(s) - biology , inflammation , efferocytosis , microbiology and biotechnology , fibrous cap , immune system , immunology , anaphylatoxin , complement system , pathogenesis , innate immune system , atheroma , pericyte , macrophage , in vitro , endothelial stem cell , pathology , medicine , genetics , psychiatry
Atherosclerosis is the process underlying heart attack and stroke. Despite decades of research, its pathogenesis remains unclear. Dogma suggests that atherosclerotic plaques expand primarily via the accumulation of cholesterol and inflammatory cells. However, recent evidence suggests that a substantial portion of the plaque may arise from a subset of "dedifferentiated" vascular smooth muscle cells (SMCs) which proliferate in a clonal fashion. Herein we use multicolor lineage-tracing models to confirm that the mature SMC can give rise to a hyperproliferative cell which appears to promote inflammation via elaboration of complement-dependent anaphylatoxins. Despite being extensively opsonized with prophagocytic complement fragments, we find that this cell also escapes immune surveillance by neighboring macrophages, thereby exacerbating its relative survival advantage. Mechanistic studies indicate this phenomenon results from a generalized opsonin-sensing defect acquired by macrophages during polarization. This defect coincides with the noncanonical up-regulation of so-called don't eat me molecules on inflamed phagocytes, which reduces their capacity for programmed cell removal (PrCR). Knockdown or knockout of the key antiphagocytic molecule CD47 restores the ability of macrophages to sense and clear opsonized targets in vitro, allowing for potent and targeted suppression of clonal SMC expansion in the plaque in vivo. Because integrated clinical and genomic analyses indicate that similar pathways are active in humans with cardiovascular disease, these studies suggest that the clonally expanding SMC may represent a translational target for treating atherosclerosis.
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