
Prof. Huiping Lin
Guangzhou Medical University, China
Title: Cell drinking: a closer look at how macropinocytosis drives cholesterol uptake in atherosclerotic vessels
Abstract:
Atherosclerotic
vascular disease is the underlying cause of myocardial infarction, stable and
unstable angina, stroke, peripheral artery disease and sudden cardiac death.
Collectively, these cardiovascular diseases are responsible for the majority of
deaths worldwide. Internalization of modified apolipoprotein B–containing
lipoproteins by macrophages through scavenger receptor (SR)-mediated pathways
is generally viewed as an essential step for the initiation and progression of
atherosclerosis. Our studies were designed to investigate the contribution of
receptor-independent LDL macropinocytosis to arterial lipid accumulation and
atherosclerosis. We developed novel genetic and pharmacological approaches,
utilized high resolution imaging techniques and employed unique in vivo lipid quantification assays to
investigate the role of macrophage macropinocytosis in the pathogenesis of
atherosclerosis. My results demonstrate that the macropinocytosis inhibitor
EIPA and selective deletion of a key pathway regulating macropinocytosis in
myeloid cells substantially decreased lesion size in both hypercholesterolemic wild
type (WT) and SR knockout (CD36-/-/SR-A-/-)
mice. Stimulation of macropinocytosis using genetic and physiologically
relevant approaches promotes lipoprotein internalization by WT and CD36-/-/SR-A-/- macrophages,
leading to foam cell formation. Serial section high-resolution imaging of
murine and human atherosclerotic arteries identified for the first time subendothelial
macrophages for the first time that demonstrate plasma membrane ruffling,
cupping and macropinosome internalization. Immunoelectron microscopy, 3D
reconstruction of macrophage foam cells and in
vivo LDL tracking demonstrate macrophage internalization of LDL in human
and murine atherosclerotic arteries via macropinocytosis. We next performed a
large, unbiased-screen of an FDA-approved drug library to identify clinically relevant therapeutic
agents that can be repurposed as pharmacological inhibitors of
macropinocytosis. Our studies identified a low MW compound (imipramine) that inhibits
macrophage macropinocytosis in vitro and in vivo. Imaging,
toxicity and selectivity studies demonstrated that imipramine is a potent (IC50 = 130.9 nM), non-toxic (selectivity index CC50/IC50 >
300) and selective inhibitor of macropinocytosis. Repurposing of imipramine to inhibit
macropinocytosis in hypercholesterolemic mice substantially decreased plaque
development compared with control treatment. Taken together, our
findings challenge the SR paradigm of atherosclerosis and identify inhibition
of receptor-independent macrophage macropinocytosis as a new therapeutic
strategy that may be beneficial in the treatment of atherosclerosis and its
cardiovascular consequences
INDEX WORDS: Atherosclerosis, foam cell,
macropinocytosis, EIPA, Na+-H+ exchanger (NHE), drug
screening, imipramine.
Biography: