4.5 Article

Autophagy dysfunction and regulatory cystatin C in macrophage death of atherosclerosis

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELLULAR AND MOLECULAR MEDICINE
Volume 20, Issue 9, Pages 1664-1672

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jcmm.12859

Keywords

autophagy; cystatin C; macrophage cell death; lysosomal membrane permeabilization

Funding

  1. Swedish Heart Lung Foundation
  2. Torsten and Ragnar Soderbergs Foundation
  3. Stroke Foundation
  4. Olle Engkvist Foundation
  5. Swedish Gamla Tjanarinnor Foundation
  6. Linkoping University
  7. Linkoping University Hospital Research Foundation
  8. Magnus Bergvall Foundation
  9. Syskonen Svensson Foundation
  10. Crafoord Foundation
  11. Royal Physiographic Society
  12. Lars Hierta Foundation
  13. Lundstrom Foundation
  14. Malmo University Hospital Foundation
  15. Swedish Society of Medicine
  16. USA National Institutes of Health

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Autophagy dysfunction in mouse atherosclerosis models has been associated with increased lipid accumulation, apoptosis and inflammation. Expression of cystatin C (CysC) is decreased in human atheroma, and CysC deficiency enhances atherosclerosis in mice. Here, we first investigated the association of autophagy and CysC expression levels with atheroma plaque severity in human atherosclerotic lesions. We found that autophagy proteins Atg5 and LC3 in advanced human carotid atherosclerotic lesions are decreased, while markers of dysfunctional autophagy p62/SQSTM1 and ubiquitin are increased together with elevated levels of lipid accumulation and apoptosis. The expressions of LC3 and Atg5 were positively associated with CysC expression. Second, we investigated whether CysC expression is involved in autophagy in atherosclerotic apoE-deficient mice, demonstrating that CysC deficiency (CysC(-/-)) in these mice results in reduction of Atg5 and LC3 levels and induction of apoptosis. Third, macrophages isolated from CysC(-/-) mice displayed increased levels of p62/SQSTM1 and higher sensitivity to 7-oxysterol-mediated lysosomal membrane destabilization and apoptosis. Finally, CysC treatment minimized oxysterol-mediated cellular lipid accumulation. We conclude that autophagy dysfunction is a characteristic of advanced human atherosclerotic lesions and is associated with reduced levels of CysC. The deficiency of CysC causes autophagy dysfunction and apoptosis in macrophages and apoE-deficient mice. The results indicate that CysC plays an important regulatory role in combating cell death via the autophagic pathway in atherosclerosis.

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