High Glucose Levels Promote Switch to Synthetic Vascular Smooth Muscle Cells via Lactate/GPR81

Jing Yang, Glenn R Gourley, Adam J Gilbertsen, Chi Chen, Lei Wang, Karen A Smith, Marion Namenwirth, Libang Yang

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Hyperglycemia, lipotoxicity, and insulin resistance are known to increase the secretion of extracellular matrix from cardiac fibroblasts as well as the activation of paracrine signaling from cardiomyocytes, immune cells, and vascular cells, which release fibroblast-activating mediators. However, their influences on vascular smooth muscle cells (vSMCs) have not been well examined. This study aimed to investigate whether contractile vascular vSMCs could develop a more synthetic phenotype in response to hyperglycemia. The results showed that contractile and synthetic vSMCs consumed high glucose in different ways. Lactate/GPR81 promotes the synthetic phenotype in vSMCs in response to high glucose levels. The stimulation of high glucose was associated with a significant increase in fibroblast-like features: synthetic vSMC marker expression, collagen 1 production, proliferation, and migration. GPR81 expression is higher in blood vessels in diabetic patients and in the high-glucose, high-lipid diet mouse. The results demonstrate that vSMCs assume a more synthetic phenotype when cultured in the presence of high glucose and, consequently, that the high glucose could trigger a vSMC-dependent cardiovascular disease mechanism in diabetes via lactate/GPR81.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number236
JournalCells
Volume13
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 by the authors.

Keywords

  • diabetes
  • glucose
  • GPR81
  • lactate
  • phenotype change
  • smooth muscle cells
  • TallyHo mouse
  • vascular complication

PubMed: MeSH publication types

  • Journal Article

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