4.6 Article

Calpain Inhibition Restores Autophagy and Prevents Mitochondrial Fragmentation in a Human iPSC Model of Diabetic Endotheliopathy

Journal

STEM CELL REPORTS
Volume 12, Issue 3, Pages 597-610

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.stemcr.2019.01.017

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Singapore Ministry of Health's National Medical Research Council Open Fund-Young Individual Research Grant [NMRC/OFYIRG/0021/2016]
  2. Khoo Postdoctoral Fellowship Award [Duke-NUS-KPFA/2016/0010]
  3. Hitachi Scholarship Research Support Grant from the Hitachi Global Foundation, Japan [RS-13, H-1]
  4. American Heart Association Scientist Development Grant [16SDG27560003]
  5. Stanford Diabetes Research Center under NIH [P30DK116074]
  6. Frontier Research Grant 2017 from the Frontier Science Research Cluster (FSRC), Universiti Malaya, Malaysia [FG021-17AFR]
  7. NIH [R01HL126516, R00HL130416]
  8. Samsung Biomedical Research Institute [OTC 1180261]
  9. National Research Foundation of Korea [NRF-2016R1A2B4008235]

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The relationship between diabetes and endothelial dysfunction remains unclear, particularly the association with pathological activation of calpain, an intracellular cysteine protease. Here, we used human induced pluripotent stem cells-derived endothelial cells (iPSC-ECs) to investigate the effects of diabetes on vascular health. Our results indicate that iPSC-ECs exposed to hyperglycemia had impaired autophagy, increased mitochondria fragmentation, and was associated with increased calpain activity. In addition, hyperglycemic iPSC-ECs had increased susceptibility to cell death when subjected to a secondary insult-simulated ischemia-reperfusion injury (sIRI). Importantly, calpain inhibition restored autophagy and reduced mitochondrial fragmentation, concurrent with maintenance of ATP production, normalized reactive oxygen species levels and reduced susceptibility to sIRI. Using a human iPSC model of diabetic endotheliopathy, we demonstrated that restoration of autophagy and prevention of mitochondrial fragmentation via calpain inhibition improves vascular integrity. Our human iPSC-EC model thus represents a valuable platform to explore biological mechanisms and new treatments for diabetes-induced endothelial dysfunction.

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