Cargando…

Elevated branched-chain amino acid promotes atherosclerosis progression by enhancing mitochondrial-to-nuclear H(2)O(2)-disulfide HMGB1 in macrophages

As the essential amino acids, branched-chain amino acid (BCAA) from diets is indispensable for health. BCAA supplementation is often recommended for patients with consumptive diseases or healthy people who exercise regularly. Latest studies and ours reported that elevated BCAA level was positively c...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Zhao, Shuai, Zhou, Lei, Wang, Qin, Cao, Jia-Hao, Chen, Yan, Wang, Wei, Zhu, Bo-Da, Wei, Zhi-Hong, Li, Rong, Li, Cong-Ye, Zhou, Geng-Yao, Tan, Zhi-Jun, Zhou, He-Ping, Li, Cheng-Xiang, Gao, Hao-Kao, Qin, Xu-Jun, Lian, Kun
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10130699/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37058999
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.redox.2023.102696
_version_ 1785031015483310080
author Zhao, Shuai
Zhou, Lei
Wang, Qin
Cao, Jia-Hao
Chen, Yan
Wang, Wei
Zhu, Bo-Da
Wei, Zhi-Hong
Li, Rong
Li, Cong-Ye
Zhou, Geng-Yao
Tan, Zhi-Jun
Zhou, He-Ping
Li, Cheng-Xiang
Gao, Hao-Kao
Qin, Xu-Jun
Lian, Kun
author_facet Zhao, Shuai
Zhou, Lei
Wang, Qin
Cao, Jia-Hao
Chen, Yan
Wang, Wei
Zhu, Bo-Da
Wei, Zhi-Hong
Li, Rong
Li, Cong-Ye
Zhou, Geng-Yao
Tan, Zhi-Jun
Zhou, He-Ping
Li, Cheng-Xiang
Gao, Hao-Kao
Qin, Xu-Jun
Lian, Kun
author_sort Zhao, Shuai
collection PubMed
description As the essential amino acids, branched-chain amino acid (BCAA) from diets is indispensable for health. BCAA supplementation is often recommended for patients with consumptive diseases or healthy people who exercise regularly. Latest studies and ours reported that elevated BCAA level was positively correlated with metabolic syndrome, diabetes, thrombosis and heart failure. However, the adverse effect of BCAA in atherosclerosis (AS) and its underlying mechanism remain unknown. Here, we found elevated plasma BCAA level was an independent risk factor for CHD patients by a human cohort study. By employing the HCD-fed ApoE(−/−) mice of AS model, ingestion of BCAA significantly increased plaque volume, instability and inflammation in AS. Elevated BCAA due to high dietary BCAA intake or BCAA catabolic defects promoted AS progression. Furthermore, BCAA catabolic defects were found in the monocytes of patients with CHD and abdominal macrophages in AS mice. Improvement of BCAA catabolism in macrophages alleviated AS burden in mice. The protein screening assay revealed HMGB1 as a potential molecular target of BCAA in activating proinflammatory macrophages. Excessive BCAA induced the formation and secretion of disulfide HMGB1 as well as subsequent inflammatory cascade of macrophages in a mitochondrial-nuclear H(2)O(2) dependent manner. Scavenging nuclear H(2)O(2) by overexpression of nucleus-targeting catalase (nCAT) effectively inhibited BCAA-induced inflammation in macrophages. All of the results above illustrate that elevated BCAA promotes AS progression by inducing redox-regulated HMGB1 translocation and further proinflammatory macrophage activation. Our findings provide novel insights into the role of animo acids as the daily dietary nutrients in AS development, and also suggest that restricting excessive dietary BCAA consuming and promoting BCAA catabolism may serve as promising strategies to alleviate and prevent AS and its subsequent CHD.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10130699
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher Elsevier
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-101306992023-04-27 Elevated branched-chain amino acid promotes atherosclerosis progression by enhancing mitochondrial-to-nuclear H(2)O(2)-disulfide HMGB1 in macrophages Zhao, Shuai Zhou, Lei Wang, Qin Cao, Jia-Hao Chen, Yan Wang, Wei Zhu, Bo-Da Wei, Zhi-Hong Li, Rong Li, Cong-Ye Zhou, Geng-Yao Tan, Zhi-Jun Zhou, He-Ping Li, Cheng-Xiang Gao, Hao-Kao Qin, Xu-Jun Lian, Kun Redox Biol Research Paper As the essential amino acids, branched-chain amino acid (BCAA) from diets is indispensable for health. BCAA supplementation is often recommended for patients with consumptive diseases or healthy people who exercise regularly. Latest studies and ours reported that elevated BCAA level was positively correlated with metabolic syndrome, diabetes, thrombosis and heart failure. However, the adverse effect of BCAA in atherosclerosis (AS) and its underlying mechanism remain unknown. Here, we found elevated plasma BCAA level was an independent risk factor for CHD patients by a human cohort study. By employing the HCD-fed ApoE(−/−) mice of AS model, ingestion of BCAA significantly increased plaque volume, instability and inflammation in AS. Elevated BCAA due to high dietary BCAA intake or BCAA catabolic defects promoted AS progression. Furthermore, BCAA catabolic defects were found in the monocytes of patients with CHD and abdominal macrophages in AS mice. Improvement of BCAA catabolism in macrophages alleviated AS burden in mice. The protein screening assay revealed HMGB1 as a potential molecular target of BCAA in activating proinflammatory macrophages. Excessive BCAA induced the formation and secretion of disulfide HMGB1 as well as subsequent inflammatory cascade of macrophages in a mitochondrial-nuclear H(2)O(2) dependent manner. Scavenging nuclear H(2)O(2) by overexpression of nucleus-targeting catalase (nCAT) effectively inhibited BCAA-induced inflammation in macrophages. All of the results above illustrate that elevated BCAA promotes AS progression by inducing redox-regulated HMGB1 translocation and further proinflammatory macrophage activation. Our findings provide novel insights into the role of animo acids as the daily dietary nutrients in AS development, and also suggest that restricting excessive dietary BCAA consuming and promoting BCAA catabolism may serve as promising strategies to alleviate and prevent AS and its subsequent CHD. Elsevier 2023-04-05 /pmc/articles/PMC10130699/ /pubmed/37058999 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.redox.2023.102696 Text en © 2023 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Research Paper
Zhao, Shuai
Zhou, Lei
Wang, Qin
Cao, Jia-Hao
Chen, Yan
Wang, Wei
Zhu, Bo-Da
Wei, Zhi-Hong
Li, Rong
Li, Cong-Ye
Zhou, Geng-Yao
Tan, Zhi-Jun
Zhou, He-Ping
Li, Cheng-Xiang
Gao, Hao-Kao
Qin, Xu-Jun
Lian, Kun
Elevated branched-chain amino acid promotes atherosclerosis progression by enhancing mitochondrial-to-nuclear H(2)O(2)-disulfide HMGB1 in macrophages
title Elevated branched-chain amino acid promotes atherosclerosis progression by enhancing mitochondrial-to-nuclear H(2)O(2)-disulfide HMGB1 in macrophages
title_full Elevated branched-chain amino acid promotes atherosclerosis progression by enhancing mitochondrial-to-nuclear H(2)O(2)-disulfide HMGB1 in macrophages
title_fullStr Elevated branched-chain amino acid promotes atherosclerosis progression by enhancing mitochondrial-to-nuclear H(2)O(2)-disulfide HMGB1 in macrophages
title_full_unstemmed Elevated branched-chain amino acid promotes atherosclerosis progression by enhancing mitochondrial-to-nuclear H(2)O(2)-disulfide HMGB1 in macrophages
title_short Elevated branched-chain amino acid promotes atherosclerosis progression by enhancing mitochondrial-to-nuclear H(2)O(2)-disulfide HMGB1 in macrophages
title_sort elevated branched-chain amino acid promotes atherosclerosis progression by enhancing mitochondrial-to-nuclear h(2)o(2)-disulfide hmgb1 in macrophages
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10130699/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37058999
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.redox.2023.102696
work_keys_str_mv AT zhaoshuai elevatedbranchedchainaminoacidpromotesatherosclerosisprogressionbyenhancingmitochondrialtonuclearh2o2disulfidehmgb1inmacrophages
AT zhoulei elevatedbranchedchainaminoacidpromotesatherosclerosisprogressionbyenhancingmitochondrialtonuclearh2o2disulfidehmgb1inmacrophages
AT wangqin elevatedbranchedchainaminoacidpromotesatherosclerosisprogressionbyenhancingmitochondrialtonuclearh2o2disulfidehmgb1inmacrophages
AT caojiahao elevatedbranchedchainaminoacidpromotesatherosclerosisprogressionbyenhancingmitochondrialtonuclearh2o2disulfidehmgb1inmacrophages
AT chenyan elevatedbranchedchainaminoacidpromotesatherosclerosisprogressionbyenhancingmitochondrialtonuclearh2o2disulfidehmgb1inmacrophages
AT wangwei elevatedbranchedchainaminoacidpromotesatherosclerosisprogressionbyenhancingmitochondrialtonuclearh2o2disulfidehmgb1inmacrophages
AT zhuboda elevatedbranchedchainaminoacidpromotesatherosclerosisprogressionbyenhancingmitochondrialtonuclearh2o2disulfidehmgb1inmacrophages
AT weizhihong elevatedbranchedchainaminoacidpromotesatherosclerosisprogressionbyenhancingmitochondrialtonuclearh2o2disulfidehmgb1inmacrophages
AT lirong elevatedbranchedchainaminoacidpromotesatherosclerosisprogressionbyenhancingmitochondrialtonuclearh2o2disulfidehmgb1inmacrophages
AT licongye elevatedbranchedchainaminoacidpromotesatherosclerosisprogressionbyenhancingmitochondrialtonuclearh2o2disulfidehmgb1inmacrophages
AT zhougengyao elevatedbranchedchainaminoacidpromotesatherosclerosisprogressionbyenhancingmitochondrialtonuclearh2o2disulfidehmgb1inmacrophages
AT tanzhijun elevatedbranchedchainaminoacidpromotesatherosclerosisprogressionbyenhancingmitochondrialtonuclearh2o2disulfidehmgb1inmacrophages
AT zhouheping elevatedbranchedchainaminoacidpromotesatherosclerosisprogressionbyenhancingmitochondrialtonuclearh2o2disulfidehmgb1inmacrophages
AT lichengxiang elevatedbranchedchainaminoacidpromotesatherosclerosisprogressionbyenhancingmitochondrialtonuclearh2o2disulfidehmgb1inmacrophages
AT gaohaokao elevatedbranchedchainaminoacidpromotesatherosclerosisprogressionbyenhancingmitochondrialtonuclearh2o2disulfidehmgb1inmacrophages
AT qinxujun elevatedbranchedchainaminoacidpromotesatherosclerosisprogressionbyenhancingmitochondrialtonuclearh2o2disulfidehmgb1inmacrophages
AT liankun elevatedbranchedchainaminoacidpromotesatherosclerosisprogressionbyenhancingmitochondrialtonuclearh2o2disulfidehmgb1inmacrophages