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Publication : Small-Vessel Vasculopathy Due to Aberrant Autophagy in LAMP-2 Deficiency.

First Author  Nguyen HT Year  2018
Journal  Sci Rep Volume  8
Issue  1 Pages  3326
PubMed ID  29463847 Mgi Jnum  J:263034
Mgi Id  MGI:6163354 Doi  10.1038/s41598-018-21602-8
Citation  Nguyen HT, et al. (2018) Small-Vessel Vasculopathy Due to Aberrant Autophagy in LAMP-2 Deficiency. Sci Rep 8(1):3326
abstractText  Lysosomal associated membrane protein 2 (LAMP2) is physiologically implicated in autophagy. A genetic LAMP2 defect causes Danon disease, which consists of two major phenotypes of myopathy and cardiomyopathy. In addition, arteriopathy may manifest on rare occasions but the pathological basis remains unknown. We encountered two Danon families that developed small-vessel vasculopathy in the coronary or cerebral arteries. To investigate the underlying mechanisms, we characterized the biological features of LAMP-2-deficient mice and cultured cells. LAMP-2-deficient mice at 9-24 months of age showed medial thickening with luminal stenosis due to proliferation of vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMC) in muscular arteries. Ultrastructural analysis of VSMC revealed various autophagic vacuoles scattered throughout the cytoplasm, suggesting impaired autophagy of long-lived metabolites and degraded organelles (i.e., mitochondria). The VSMC in Lamp2 null mice expressed more vimentin but less alpha-smooth muscle actin (alpha-SMA), indicating a switch from contractile to synthetic phenotype. Silencing of LAMP2 in cultured human brain VSMC showed the same phenotypic transition with mitochondrial fragmentation, enhanced mitochondrial respiration, and overproduction of reactive oxygen species (ROS). These findings indicate that LAMP-2 deficiency leads to arterial medial hypertrophy with the phenotypic conversion of VSMC, resulting from age-dependent accumulation of cellular waste generated by aberrant autophagy.
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