Single-Cell Genomics Reveals a Novel Cell State During Smooth Muscle Cell Phenotypic Switching and Potential Therapeutic Targets for Atherosclerosis in Mouse and Human

Huize Pan(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Chenyi Xue(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Benjamin J. Auerbach(Joint Center for Structural Genomics), Jiaxin Fan(University of Pennsylvania), Alexander C. Bashore(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Jian Cui(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Dina Y. Yang(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Sarah B. Trignano(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Wen Liu(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Jianting Shi(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Chinyere O. Ihuegbu(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Erin Bush(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Jeremy Worley(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Lukas Vlahos(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Pasquale Laise(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Robert A. Solomon(NewYork–Presbyterian Hospital), E. Sander Connolly(NewYork–Presbyterian Hospital), Andrea Califano(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Peter A. Sims(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Hanrui Zhang(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Mingyao Li(University of Pennsylvania), Muredach P. Reilly(Columbia University Irving Medical Center)
Circulation
September 23, 2020
Cited by 608Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Smooth muscle cells (SMCs) play significant roles in atherosclerosis via phenotypic switching, a pathological process in which SMC dedifferentiation, migration, and transdifferentiation into other cell types. Yet how SMCs contribute to the pathophysiology of atherosclerosis remains elusive. METHODS: To reveal the trajectories of SMC transdifferentiation during atherosclerosis and to identify molecular targets for disease therapy, we combined SMC fate mapping and single-cell RNA sequencing of both mouse and human atherosclerotic plaques. We also performed cell biology experiments on isolated SMC-derived cells, conducted integrative human genomics, and used pharmacological studies targeting SMC-derived cells both in vivo and in vitro. RESULTS: We found that SMCs transitioned to an intermediate cell state during atherosclerosis, which was also found in human atherosclerotic plaques of carotid and coronary arteries. SMC-derived intermediate cells, termed "SEM" cells (stem cell, endothelial cell, monocyte), were multipotent and could differentiate into macrophage-like and fibrochondrocyte-like cells, as well as return toward the SMC phenotype. Retinoic acid (RA) signaling was identified as a regulator of SMC to SEM cell transition, and RA signaling was dysregulated in symptomatic human atherosclerosis. Human genomics revealed enrichment of genome-wide association study signals for coronary artery disease in RA signaling target gene loci and correlation between coronary artery disease risk alleles and repressed expression of these genes. Activation of RA signaling by all-trans RA, an anticancer drug for acute promyelocytic leukemia, blocked SMC transition to SEM cells, reduced atherosclerotic burden, and promoted fibrous cap stability. CONCLUSIONS: Integration of cell-specific fate mapping, single-cell genomics, and human genetics adds novel insights into the complexity of SMC biology and reveals regulatory pathways for therapeutic targeting of SMC transitions in atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease.


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