SEC62-dependent ER-phagy contributes to apelin-13/APJ-induced monocyte-vascular endothelial cell adhesion in atherosclerosis pathogenesis.

Acta Pharmacol Sin

Institute of Pharmacy and Pharmacology, Hunan Province Cooperative Innovation Center for Molecular Target New Drug Study, College of Basic Medical Science, Hengyang Medical School, University of South China, Hengyang, China.

Published: February 2025

The monocyte adhesion to vascular endothelial cells constitutes a key step in atherosclerosis pathogenesis. We previously found that ROS-autophagy pathway participated in the monocyte-endothelial cell adhesion induced by angiotensin domain type 1 receptor-associated proteins (APJ) and its endogenous ligand apelin-13. In this study, we investigated what specific type of autophagy apelin-13 regulated in this process. By conducting full-scale transcriptomic analysis in apelin-13-treated human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs), we found that the transcription levels of ER-phagy receptor protein SEC62 were significantly elevated. Importantly, SEC62 was also upregulated in human atherosclerotic lesions. Thus, we investigated the effects of SEC62-dependent ER-phagy on apelin-13-induced monocyte-endothelial cell adhesion and atherosclerosis pathogenesis. We demonstrated that Apelin-13 (0.001-1 μM) dose-dependently upregulated SEC62 expression thereby inducing ER-phagy in HUVECs. This effect was reversed by autophagy inhibitor 3MA (10 mM) and endoplasmic reticulum stress inhibitor salubrinal (10 μM). The siRNA-Sec62, 3MA (10 mM), and salubrinal (10 μM) all inhibited apelin-13-induced monocyte-endothelial cells adhesion, whereas vascular endothelial cells specific SEC62 deletion alleviated atherosclerotic plaques area, intercellular adhesion molecules expression and lesional macrophages in apelin-13-treated APOE mice with high-fat and high-cholesterol diet. Moreover, we demonstrated that ubiquitin-like modification of ALDH1L1 was involved in SEC62-dependent ER-phagy in apelin-13-treated HUVECs: apelin-13 upregulated small ubiquitin-like protein UBL4A, which mediated the ubiquitination-like modification of ALDH1L1 at 812-lysine site. This, in turn, promoted insertion of ALDH1L1 into ER membrane and led to SEC62-dependent ER-phagy. We showed that siRNA-UBL4A, siRNA-ALDH1L1, siRNA-ASNA1, and the mutant of 812 lysine site of ALDH1L1 all decreased apelin-13-induced monocyte-endothelial cell adhesion. We conclude that apelin-13 induces SEC62-dependent ER-phagy to promote monocyte-endothelial cell adhesion and atherosclerosis. This study reveals new mechanisms underlying atherosclerosis and identifies a potential therapeutic target.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41401-024-01471-wDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

sec62-dependent er-phagy
20
cell adhesion
20
monocyte-endothelial cell
16
adhesion atherosclerosis
12
atherosclerosis pathogenesis
12
endothelial cells
12
apelin-13-induced monocyte-endothelial
12
adhesion
8
adhesion vascular
8
vascular endothelial
8

Similar Publications

SEC62-dependent ER-phagy contributes to apelin-13/APJ-induced monocyte-vascular endothelial cell adhesion in atherosclerosis pathogenesis.

Acta Pharmacol Sin

February 2025

Institute of Pharmacy and Pharmacology, Hunan Province Cooperative Innovation Center for Molecular Target New Drug Study, College of Basic Medical Science, Hengyang Medical School, University of South China, Hengyang, China.

The monocyte adhesion to vascular endothelial cells constitutes a key step in atherosclerosis pathogenesis. We previously found that ROS-autophagy pathway participated in the monocyte-endothelial cell adhesion induced by angiotensin domain type 1 receptor-associated proteins (APJ) and its endogenous ligand apelin-13. In this study, we investigated what specific type of autophagy apelin-13 regulated in this process.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!