4.8 Article

Forestalling age-impaired angiogenesis and blood flow by targeting NOX: Interplay of NOX1, IL-6, and SASP in propagating cell senescence

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2015666118

Keywords

endothelium; senescence; aging; NADPH oxidase; IL-6

Funding

  1. NIH [R01HL142248, R01HL079207, R01HL112914, T32GM008424]
  2. American Heart Association [18TPA34170069]
  3. AHA fellowship [17POST33660330, R01 HL 133864, R01 HL 128304, R01 HL 149825, R01 HL 128304-S1, R01 HL153532]
  4. AHA Established Investigator Award [19EIA34770095, R01HL142932, K22HL117917]
  5. Institute for Transfusion Medicine
  6. Hemophilia Center of Western Pennsylvania and Vitalant

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In an investigation into signaling triggered by aging and hyperglycemia, researchers found that NADPH Oxidase (NOX) plays a crucial role in driving cell damage, inflammation, and cellular senescence. Inhibiting NOX1 can reverse age-related impairments in blood flow and angiogenesis, as well as disrupt proinflammatory signaling associated with senescence. Targeting the NOX1-SASP signaling axis is predicted to be an effective strategy for mitigating vascular and organ system senescence.
In an aging population, intense interest has shifted toward prolonging health span. Mounting evidence suggests that cellular reactive species are propagators of cell damage, inflammation, and cellular senescence. Thus, such species have emerged as putative provocateurs and targets for senolysis, and a clearer understanding of their molecular origin and regulation is of paramount importance. In an inquiry into signaling triggered by aging and proxy instigator, hyperglycemia, we show that NADPH Oxidase (NOX) drives cell DNA damage and alters nuclear envelope integrity, inflammation, tissue dysfunction, and cellular senescence in mice and humans with similar causality. Most notably, selective NOX1 inhibition rescues age-impaired blood flow and angiogenesis, vasodilation, and the endothelial cell wound response. Indeed, NOX1i delivery in vivo completely reversed age-impaired hind-limb blood flow and angiogenesis while disrupting a NOX1-IL-6 senescence associated secretory phenotype (SASP) proinflammatory signaling loop. Relevant to its comorbidity with age, clinical samples from diabetic versus nondiabetic subjects reveal as operant this NOX1-mediated vascular senescence and inflammation in humans. On a mechanistic level, our findings support a previously unidentified role for IL-6 in this feedforward inflammatory loop and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPAR gamma) down-regulation as inversely modulating p65-mediated NOX1 transcription. Targeting this previously unidentified NOX1-SASP signaling axis in aging is predicted to be an effective strategy for mitigating senescence in the vasculature and other organ systems.

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