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Vascular smooth muscle cell senescence accelerates medin aggregation via small extracellular vesicle secretion and extracellular matrix reorganization

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Vascular smooth muscle cell senescence accelerates medin aggregation via small extracellular vesicle secretion and extracellular matrix reorganization. / Whitehead, Meredith; Yusoff, Syabira; Ahmad, Sadia et al.
In: Aging Cell, Vol. 22, No. 2, e13746, 28.02.2023.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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APA

Whitehead, M., Yusoff, S., Ahmad, S., Schmidt, L., Mayr, M., Madine, J., Middleton, D., & Shanahan, C. (2023). Vascular smooth muscle cell senescence accelerates medin aggregation via small extracellular vesicle secretion and extracellular matrix reorganization. Aging Cell, 22(2), Article e13746. https://doi.org/10.1111/acel.13746

Vancouver

Whitehead M, Yusoff S, Ahmad S, Schmidt L, Mayr M, Madine J et al. Vascular smooth muscle cell senescence accelerates medin aggregation via small extracellular vesicle secretion and extracellular matrix reorganization. Aging Cell. 2023 Feb 28;22(2):e13746. Epub 2022 Nov 25. doi: 10.1111/acel.13746

Author

Whitehead, Meredith ; Yusoff, Syabira ; Ahmad, Sadia et al. / Vascular smooth muscle cell senescence accelerates medin aggregation via small extracellular vesicle secretion and extracellular matrix reorganization. In: Aging Cell. 2023 ; Vol. 22, No. 2.

Bibtex

@article{1935caa6ba334957b5964d87a318c62b,
title = "Vascular smooth muscle cell senescence accelerates medin aggregation via small extracellular vesicle secretion and extracellular matrix reorganization",
abstract = "Vascular amyloidosis, caused when peptide monomers aggregate into insoluble amyloid, is a prevalent age-associated pathology. Aortic medial amyloid (AMA) is the most common human amyloid and is composed of medin, a 50-amino acid peptide. Emerging evidence has implicated extracellular vesicles (EVs) as mediators of pathological amyloid accumulation in the extracellular matrix (ECM). To determine the mechanisms of AMA formation with age, we explored the impact of vascular smooth muscle cell (VSMC) senescence, EV secretion, and ECM remodeling on medin accumulation. Medin was detected in EVs secreted from primary VSMCs. Small, round medin aggregates colocalized with EV markers in decellularized ECM in vitro and medin was shown on the surface of EVs deposited in the ECM. Decreasing EV secretion with an inhibitor attenuated aggregation and deposition of medin in the ECM. Medin accumulation in the aortic wall of human subjects was strongly correlated with age and VSMC senescence increased EV secretion, increased EV medin loading and triggered deposition of fibril-like medin. Proteomic analysis showed VSMC senescence induced changes in EV cargo and ECM composition, which led to enhanced EV-ECM binding and accelerated medin aggregation. Abundance of the proteoglycan, HSPG2, was increased in the senescent ECM and colocalized with EVs and medin. Isolated EVs selectively bound to HSPG2 in the ECM and its knock-down decreased formation of fibril-like medin structures. These data identify VSMC-derived EVs and HSPG2 in the ECM as key mediators of medin accumulation, contributing to age-associated AMA development.",
keywords = "amyloid, extracellular matrix, extracellular vesicles, proteoglycans",
author = "Meredith Whitehead and Syabira Yusoff and Sadia Ahmad and Lukas Schmidt and Manuel Mayr and Jillian Madine and David Middleton and Catherine Shanahan",
year = "2023",
month = feb,
day = "28",
doi = "10.1111/acel.13746",
language = "English",
volume = "22",
journal = "Aging Cell",
issn = "1474-9718",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Vascular smooth muscle cell senescence accelerates medin aggregation via small extracellular vesicle secretion and extracellular matrix reorganization

AU - Whitehead, Meredith

AU - Yusoff, Syabira

AU - Ahmad, Sadia

AU - Schmidt, Lukas

AU - Mayr, Manuel

AU - Madine, Jillian

AU - Middleton, David

AU - Shanahan, Catherine

PY - 2023/2/28

Y1 - 2023/2/28

N2 - Vascular amyloidosis, caused when peptide monomers aggregate into insoluble amyloid, is a prevalent age-associated pathology. Aortic medial amyloid (AMA) is the most common human amyloid and is composed of medin, a 50-amino acid peptide. Emerging evidence has implicated extracellular vesicles (EVs) as mediators of pathological amyloid accumulation in the extracellular matrix (ECM). To determine the mechanisms of AMA formation with age, we explored the impact of vascular smooth muscle cell (VSMC) senescence, EV secretion, and ECM remodeling on medin accumulation. Medin was detected in EVs secreted from primary VSMCs. Small, round medin aggregates colocalized with EV markers in decellularized ECM in vitro and medin was shown on the surface of EVs deposited in the ECM. Decreasing EV secretion with an inhibitor attenuated aggregation and deposition of medin in the ECM. Medin accumulation in the aortic wall of human subjects was strongly correlated with age and VSMC senescence increased EV secretion, increased EV medin loading and triggered deposition of fibril-like medin. Proteomic analysis showed VSMC senescence induced changes in EV cargo and ECM composition, which led to enhanced EV-ECM binding and accelerated medin aggregation. Abundance of the proteoglycan, HSPG2, was increased in the senescent ECM and colocalized with EVs and medin. Isolated EVs selectively bound to HSPG2 in the ECM and its knock-down decreased formation of fibril-like medin structures. These data identify VSMC-derived EVs and HSPG2 in the ECM as key mediators of medin accumulation, contributing to age-associated AMA development.

AB - Vascular amyloidosis, caused when peptide monomers aggregate into insoluble amyloid, is a prevalent age-associated pathology. Aortic medial amyloid (AMA) is the most common human amyloid and is composed of medin, a 50-amino acid peptide. Emerging evidence has implicated extracellular vesicles (EVs) as mediators of pathological amyloid accumulation in the extracellular matrix (ECM). To determine the mechanisms of AMA formation with age, we explored the impact of vascular smooth muscle cell (VSMC) senescence, EV secretion, and ECM remodeling on medin accumulation. Medin was detected in EVs secreted from primary VSMCs. Small, round medin aggregates colocalized with EV markers in decellularized ECM in vitro and medin was shown on the surface of EVs deposited in the ECM. Decreasing EV secretion with an inhibitor attenuated aggregation and deposition of medin in the ECM. Medin accumulation in the aortic wall of human subjects was strongly correlated with age and VSMC senescence increased EV secretion, increased EV medin loading and triggered deposition of fibril-like medin. Proteomic analysis showed VSMC senescence induced changes in EV cargo and ECM composition, which led to enhanced EV-ECM binding and accelerated medin aggregation. Abundance of the proteoglycan, HSPG2, was increased in the senescent ECM and colocalized with EVs and medin. Isolated EVs selectively bound to HSPG2 in the ECM and its knock-down decreased formation of fibril-like medin structures. These data identify VSMC-derived EVs and HSPG2 in the ECM as key mediators of medin accumulation, contributing to age-associated AMA development.

KW - amyloid

KW - extracellular matrix

KW - extracellular vesicles

KW - proteoglycans

U2 - 10.1111/acel.13746

DO - 10.1111/acel.13746

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 36433666

VL - 22

JO - Aging Cell

JF - Aging Cell

SN - 1474-9718

IS - 2

M1 - e13746

ER -