AimsMacrophages (MPs) and vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) closely interact within the growing atherosclerotic plaque. An in vitro co-culture model was established to study how MPs modulate VSMC behaviour.Methods and resultsMPs were exposed to fluorescence-labelled-acetylated LDL (FL-acLDL) prior to co-culture with VSMCs. Fluorescence microscopy visualized first transport of FL-acLDL within 6 h after co-culture implementation. When MPs had been fed with FL-acLDL in complex with fluorescence-labelled cholesterol (FL-Chol), these complexes were also transferred during co-culture and resulted in cholesterol positive lipid droplet formation in VSMCs. When infected with a virus coding for a fusion protein of Rab5a and fluorescent protein reporter (FP) to mark early endosomes, no co-localization between Rab5a-FP and the transported FL-acLDL within VSMCs was detected implying a mechanism independent of phagocytosis. Next, expression of lysosome-associated membrane glycoprotein 1 (LAMP1)-FP, marking all lysosomes in VSMCs, revealed that the FL-acLDL was located in non-acidic lysosomes. MPs infected with virus encoding for LAMP1-FP prior to co-culture demonstrated that intact fluorescence-marked lysosomes were transported into the VSMC, instead. Xenogenic cell composition (rat VSMC, human MP) and subsequent quantitative RT-PCR with rat-specific primers rendered induction of genes typical for MPs and down-regulation of the cholesterol sensitive HMG-CoA reductase.ConclusionOur results demonstrate that acLDL/cholesterol-loaded lysosomes are transported from MPs into VSMCs in vitro. Lysosomal transfer results in a phenotypic alteration of the VSMC towards a foam cell-like cell. This way VSMCs may lose their plaque stabilizing properties and rather contribute to plaque destabilization and rupture. © 2012 The Author.
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Weinert, S., Poitz, D. M., Auffermann-Gretzinger, S., Eger, L., Herold, J., Medunjanin, S., … Braun-Dullaeus, R. C. (2013). The lysosomal transfer of LDL/cholesterol from macrophages into vascular smooth muscle cells induces their phenotypic alteration. Cardiovascular Research, 97(3), 544–552. https://doi.org/10.1093/cvr/cvs367