Department of Physiology, Brody School of Medicine, East Carolina University, Greenville, North Carolina, United States.
Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, Brody School of Medicine, East Carolina University, Greenville, North Carolina, United States.
Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol. 2024 Nov 1;327(5):H1210-H1229. doi: 10.1152/ajpheart.00413.2024. Epub 2024 Sep 13.
Phenotypic transformation of vascular smooth muscle (VSM) from a contractile state to a synthetic, proliferative state is a hallmark of cardiovascular disease (CVD). In CVD, diseased tissue often becomes acidic from altered cellular metabolism secondary to compromised blood flow, yet the contribution of local acid/base imbalance to the disease process has been historically overlooked. In this study, we examined the regulatory impact of the pH-sensing G protein-coupled receptor GPR68 on vascular smooth muscle (VSM) proliferation in vivo and in vitro in wild-type (WT) and GPR68 knockout (KO) male and female mice. Arterial injury reduced GPR68 expression in WT vessels and exaggerated medial wall remodeling in GPR68 KO vessels. In vitro, KO VSM cells showed increased cell-cycle progression and proliferation compared with WT VSM cells, and GPR68-inducing acidic exposure reduced proliferation in WT cells. mRNA and protein expression analyses revealed increased Rap1A in KO cells compared with WT cells, and RNA silencing of Rap1A reduced KO VSM cell proliferation. In sum, these findings support a growth-inhibitory capacity of pH-sensing GPR68 and suggest a mechanistic role for the small GTPase Rap1A in GPR68-mediated VSM growth control. These results shed light on GPR68 and its effector Rap1A as potential targets to combat pathological phenotypic switching and proliferation in VSM. Extracellular acidosis remains an understudied feature of many pathologies. We examined a potential regulatory role for pH-sensing GPR68 in vascular smooth muscle (VSM) growth in the context of CVD. With in vivo and in vitro growth models with GPR68-deficient mice and GPR68 induction strategies, novel findings revealed capacity of GPR68 to attenuate growth through the small GTPase Rap1A. These observations highlight GPR68 and its effector Rap1A as possible therapeutic targets to combat pathological VSM growth.
血管平滑肌(VSM)从收缩状态向合成、增殖状态的表型转化是心血管疾病(CVD)的一个标志。在 CVD 中,由于血流受损导致细胞代谢改变,患病组织通常会变得酸性,但局部酸碱失衡对疾病过程的贡献在历史上一直被忽视。在这项研究中,我们研究了 pH 感应 G 蛋白偶联受体 GPR68 对体内和体外野生型(WT)和 GPR68 敲除(KO)雄性和雌性小鼠血管平滑肌(VSM)增殖的调节作用。动脉损伤减少了 WT 血管中的 GPR68 表达,并使 GPR68 KO 血管的中膜壁重塑加剧。在体外,KO VSM 细胞与 WT VSM 细胞相比,细胞周期进程和增殖增加,而诱导酸性暴露会降低 WT 细胞的增殖。mRNA 和蛋白质表达分析显示,与 WT 细胞相比,KO 细胞中的 Rap1A 表达增加,而 Rap1A 的 RNA 沉默减少了 KO VSM 细胞的增殖。总之,这些发现支持 pH 感应 GPR68 具有生长抑制能力,并表明小 GTPase Rap1A 在 GPR68 介导的 VSM 生长控制中具有机制作用。这些结果揭示了 GPR68 及其效应因子 Rap1A 作为对抗 VSM 病理性表型转换和增殖的潜在靶点。细胞外酸中毒仍然是许多病理学的一个研究不足的特征。我们研究了 pH 感应 GPR68 在 CVD 背景下对血管平滑肌(VSM)生长的潜在调节作用。通过体内和体外生长模型,使用 GPR68 缺陷小鼠和 GPR68 诱导策略,新的发现揭示了 GPR68 通过小 GTPase Rap1A 来减弱生长的能力。这些观察结果突出了 GPR68 及其效应因子 Rap1A 作为对抗病理性 VSM 生长的可能治疗靶点。