International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Nov 2022)

Physiological Impact of a Synthetic Elastic Protein in Arterial Diseases Related to Alterations of Elastic Fibers: Effect on the Aorta of Elastin-Haploinsufficient Male and Female Mice

  • Quentin Boëté,
  • Ming Lo,
  • Kiao-Ling Liu,
  • Guillaume Vial,
  • Emeline Lemarié,
  • Maxime Rougelot,
  • Iris Steuckardt,
  • Olfa Harki,
  • Axel Couturier,
  • Jonathan Gaucher,
  • Sophie Bouyon,
  • Alexandra Demory,
  • Antoine Boutin-Paradis,
  • Naima El Kholti,
  • Aurore Berthier,
  • Jean-Louis Pépin,
  • Anne Briançon-Marjollet,
  • Elise Lambert,
  • Romain Debret,
  • Gilles Faury

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms232113464
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 21
p. 13464

Abstract

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Elastic fibers, made of elastin (90%) and fibrillin-rich microfibrils (10%), are the key extracellular components, which endow the arteries with elasticity. The alteration of elastic fibers leads to cardiovascular dysfunctions, as observed in elastin haploinsufficiency in mice (Eln+/-) or humans (supravalvular aortic stenosis or Williams–Beuren syndrome). In Eln+/+ and Eln+/- mice, we evaluated (arteriography, histology, qPCR, Western blots and cell cultures) the beneficial impact of treatment with a synthetic elastic protein (SEP), mimicking several domains of tropoelastin, the precursor of elastin, including hydrophobic elasticity-related domains and binding sites for elastin receptors. In the aorta or cultured aortic smooth muscle cells from these animals, SEP treatment induced a synthesis of elastin and fibrillin-1, a thickening of the aortic elastic lamellae, a decrease in wall stiffness and/or a strong trend toward a reduction in the elastic lamella disruptions in Eln+/- mice. SEP also modified collagen conformation and transcript expressions, enhanced the aorta constrictive response to phenylephrine in several animal groups, and, in female Eln+/- mice, it restored the normal vasodilatory response to acetylcholine. SEP should now be considered as a biomimetic molecule with an interesting potential for future treatments of elastin-deficient patients with altered arterial structure/function.

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