Background: Growing evidence correlated changes in bioactive sphingolipids, particularly S1P (sphingosine-1-phosphate) and ceramides, with coronary artery diseases. Furthermore, specific plasma ceramide species can predict major cardiovascular events. Dysfunction of the endothelium lining lesion-prone areas plays a pivotal role in atherosclerosis. Yet, how sphingolipid metabolism and signaling change and contribute to endothelial dysfunction and atherosclerosis remain poorly understood. Methods: We used an established model of coronary atherosclerosis in mice, combined with sphingolipidomics, RNA-sequencing, flow cytometry, and immunostaining to investigate the contribution of sphingolipid metabolism and signaling to endothelial cell (EC) activation and dysfunction. Results: We demonstrated that hemodynamic stress induced an early metabolic rewiring towards endothelial sphingolipid de novo biosynthesis, favoring S1P signaling over ceramides as a protective response. This finding is a paradigm shift from the current belief that ceramide accrual contributes to endothelial dysfunction. The enzyme SPT (serine palmitoyltransferase) commences de novo biosynthesis of sphingolipids and is inhibited by NOGO-B (reticulon-4B), an ER membrane protein. Here, we showed that NOGO-B is upregulated by hemodynamic stress in myocardial EC of ApoE-/- mice and is expressed in the endothelium lining coronary lesions in mice and humans. We demonstrated that mice lacking NOGO-B specifically in EC (Nogo-A/BECKOApoE-/-) were resistant to coronary atherosclerosis development and progression, and mortality. Fibrous cap thickness was significantly increased in Nogo-A/BECKOApoE-/- mice and correlated with reduced necrotic core and macrophage infiltration. Mechanistically, the deletion of NOGO-B in EC sustained the rewiring of sphingolipid metabolism towards S1P, imparting an atheroprotective endothelial transcriptional signature. Conclusions: These data demonstrated that hemodynamic stress induced a protective rewiring of sphingolipid metabolism, favoring S1P over ceramide. NOGO-B deletion sustained the rewiring of sphingolipid metabolism toward S1P protecting EC from activation under hemodynamic stress and refraining coronary atherosclerosis. These findings also set forth the foundation for sphingolipid-based therapeutics to limit atheroprogression.
Rewiring Endothelial Sphingolipid Metabolism to Favor S1P Over Ceramide Protects From Coronary Atherosclerosis / O.L. Manzo, J. Nour, L. Sasset, A. Marino, L. Rubinelli, S. Palikhe, M. Smimmo, Y. Hu, M.R. Bucci, A. Borczuk, O. Elemento, J.K. Freed, G.D. Norata, A. Di Lorenzo. - In: CIRCULATION RESEARCH. - ISSN 1524-4571. - 134:8(2024 Apr 12), pp. 990-1005. [10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.123.323826]
Rewiring Endothelial Sphingolipid Metabolism to Favor S1P Over Ceramide Protects From Coronary Atherosclerosis
J. NourSecondo
;G.D. NorataPenultimo
;
2024
Abstract
Background: Growing evidence correlated changes in bioactive sphingolipids, particularly S1P (sphingosine-1-phosphate) and ceramides, with coronary artery diseases. Furthermore, specific plasma ceramide species can predict major cardiovascular events. Dysfunction of the endothelium lining lesion-prone areas plays a pivotal role in atherosclerosis. Yet, how sphingolipid metabolism and signaling change and contribute to endothelial dysfunction and atherosclerosis remain poorly understood. Methods: We used an established model of coronary atherosclerosis in mice, combined with sphingolipidomics, RNA-sequencing, flow cytometry, and immunostaining to investigate the contribution of sphingolipid metabolism and signaling to endothelial cell (EC) activation and dysfunction. Results: We demonstrated that hemodynamic stress induced an early metabolic rewiring towards endothelial sphingolipid de novo biosynthesis, favoring S1P signaling over ceramides as a protective response. This finding is a paradigm shift from the current belief that ceramide accrual contributes to endothelial dysfunction. The enzyme SPT (serine palmitoyltransferase) commences de novo biosynthesis of sphingolipids and is inhibited by NOGO-B (reticulon-4B), an ER membrane protein. Here, we showed that NOGO-B is upregulated by hemodynamic stress in myocardial EC of ApoE-/- mice and is expressed in the endothelium lining coronary lesions in mice and humans. We demonstrated that mice lacking NOGO-B specifically in EC (Nogo-A/BECKOApoE-/-) were resistant to coronary atherosclerosis development and progression, and mortality. Fibrous cap thickness was significantly increased in Nogo-A/BECKOApoE-/- mice and correlated with reduced necrotic core and macrophage infiltration. Mechanistically, the deletion of NOGO-B in EC sustained the rewiring of sphingolipid metabolism towards S1P, imparting an atheroprotective endothelial transcriptional signature. Conclusions: These data demonstrated that hemodynamic stress induced a protective rewiring of sphingolipid metabolism, favoring S1P over ceramide. NOGO-B deletion sustained the rewiring of sphingolipid metabolism toward S1P protecting EC from activation under hemodynamic stress and refraining coronary atherosclerosis. These findings also set forth the foundation for sphingolipid-based therapeutics to limit atheroprogression.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
---|---|---|---|
Rewiring Endothelial Sphingolipid Metabolism to Favor S1P Over Ceramide Protects From Coronary Atherosclerosis.pdf
embargo fino al 12/04/2025
Tipologia:
Post-print, accepted manuscript ecc. (versione accettata dall'editore)
Dimensione
4.41 MB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
4.41 MB | Adobe PDF | Visualizza/Apri Richiedi una copia |
manzo-et-al-2024-rewiring-endothelial-sphingolipid-metabolism-to-favor-s1p-over-ceramide-protects-from-coronary(1).pdf
accesso riservato
Tipologia:
Publisher's version/PDF
Dimensione
10.77 MB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
10.77 MB | Adobe PDF | Visualizza/Apri Richiedi una copia |
manzo-et-al-2024-rewiring-endothelial-sphingolipid-metabolism-to-favor-s1p-over-ceramide-protects-from-coronary(1)_compressed.pdf
accesso riservato
Tipologia:
Publisher's version/PDF
Dimensione
887.76 kB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
887.76 kB | Adobe PDF | Visualizza/Apri Richiedi una copia |
Pubblicazioni consigliate
I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.