4.7 Article

Muscle-derived follistatin-like 1 functions to reduce neointimal formation after vascular injury

期刊

CARDIOVASCULAR RESEARCH
卷 103, 期 1, 页码 111-120

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/cvr/cvu105

关键词

Fstl1; Myokine; Vascular remodelling; Smooth muscle cell; AMPK

资金

  1. Takeda Science Foundation
  2. Uehara Memorial Foundation
  3. Daiichi-Sankyo Foundation of Life Science
  4. AstraZeneca
  5. SENSHIN Medical Research Foundation
  6. Cardiovascular Research Fund, Tokyo, Japan

向作者/读者索取更多资源

It is well-established that exercise diminishes cardiovascular risk, but whether humoral factors secreted by muscle confer these benefits has not been conclusively shown. We have shown that the secreted protein follistatin-like 1 (Fstl1) has beneficial actions on cardiac and endothelial function. However, the role of muscle-derived Fstl1 in proliferative vascular disease remains largely unknown. Here, we investigated whether muscle-derived Fstl1 modulates vascular remodelling in response to injury. The targeted ablation of Fstl1 in muscle led to an increase in neointimal formation following wire-induced arterial injury compared with control mice. Conversely, muscle-specific Fstl1 transgenic (TG) mice displayed a decrease in the neointimal thickening following arterial injury. Muscle-specific Fstl1 ablation and overexpression increased and decreased, respectively, the frequency of BrdU-positive proliferating cells in injured vessels. In cultured human aortic smooth muscle cells (HASMCs), treatment with human FSTL1 protein decreased proliferation and migration induced by stimulation with PDGF-BB. Treatment with FSTL1 enhanced AMPK phosphorylation, and inhibition of AMPK abrogated the inhibitory actions of FSTL1 on HASMC responses to PDGF-BB. The injured arteries of Fstl1-TG mice exhibited an increase in AMPK phosphorylation, and administration of AMPK inhibitor reversed the anti-proliferative actions of Fstl1 on the vessel wall. Our findings indicate that muscle-derived Fstl1 attenuates neointimal formation in response to arterial injury by suppressing SMC proliferation through an AMPK-dependent mechanism. Thus, the release of protein factors from muscle, such as Fstl1, may partly explain why the maintenance of muscle function can have a therapeutic effect on the cardiovascular system.

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