Alexander N. Kapustin
King's College London
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Featured researches published by Alexander N. Kapustin.
Circulation Research | 2011
Catherine M. Shanahan; Matthew H. Crouthamel; Alexander N. Kapustin; Cecilia M. Giachelli
Vascular calcification contributes to the high risk of cardiovascular mortality in chronic kidney disease (CKD) patients. Dysregulation of calcium (Ca) and phosphate (P) metabolism is common in CKD patients and drives vascular calcification. In this article, we review the physiological regulatory mechanisms for Ca and P homeostasis and the basis for their dysregulation in CKD. In addition, we highlight recent findings indicating that elevated Ca and P have direct effects on vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) that promote vascular calcification, including stimulation of osteogenic/chondrogenic differentiation, vesicle release, apoptosis, loss of inhibitors, and extracellular matrix degradation. These studies suggest a major role for elevated P in promoting osteogenic/chondrogenic differentiation of VSMC, whereas elevated Ca has a predominant role in promoting VSMC apoptosis and vesicle release. Furthermore, the effects of elevated Ca and P are synergistic, providing a major stimulus for vascular calcification in CKD. Unraveling the complex regulatory pathways that mediate the effects of both Ca and P on VSMCs will ultimately provide novel targets and therapies to limit the destructive effects of vascular calcification in CKD patients.
Circulation Research | 2011
Alexander N. Kapustin; John D. Davies; Joanne L. Reynolds; Rosamund McNair; Gregory T. Jones; Anissa Sidibe; Leon J. Schurgers; Jeremy N. Skepper; Diane Proudfoot; Manuel Mayr; Catherine M. Shanahan
Rationale: Matrix vesicles (MVs) are specialized structures that initiate mineral nucleation during physiological skeletogenesis. Similar vesicular structures are deposited at sites of pathological vascular calcification, and studies in vitro have shown that elevated levels of extracellular calcium (Ca) can induce mineralization of vascular smooth muscle cell (VSMC)–derived MVs. Objectives: To determine the mechanisms that promote mineralization of VSMC-MVs in response to calcium stress. Methods and Results: Transmission electron microscopy showed that both nonmineralized and mineralized MVs were abundantly deposited in the extracellular matrix at sites of calcification. Using cultured human VSMCs, we showed that MV mineralization is calcium dependent and can be inhibited by BAPTA-AM. MVs released by VSMCs in response to extracellular calcium lacked the key mineralization inhibitor matrix Gla protein and showed enhanced matrix metalloproteinase-2 activity. Proteomics revealed that VSMC-MVs share similarities with chondrocyte-derived MVs, including enrichment of the calcium-binding proteins annexins (Anx) A2, A5, and A6. Biotin cross-linking and flow cytometry demonstrated that in response to calcium, AnxA6 shuttled to the plasma membrane and was selectively enriched in MVs. AnxA6 was also abundant at sites of vascular calcification in vivo, and small interfering RNA depletion of AnxA6 reduced VSMC mineralization. Flow cytometry showed that in addition to AnxA6, calcium induced phosphatidylserine exposure on the MV surface, thus providing hydroxyapatite nucleation sites. Conclusions: In contrast to the coordinated signaling response observed in chondrocyte MVs, mineralization of VSMC-MVs is a pathological response to disturbed intracellular calcium homeostasis that leads to inhibitor depletion and the formation of AnxA6/phosphatidylserine nucleation complexes.
Circulation Research | 2015
Alexander N. Kapustin; Martijn L. Chatrou; Ignat Drozdov; Ying Zheng; Sean M. Davidson; Daniel Soong; Malgorzata Furmanik; Pilar Sanchis; Rafael T. M. de Rosales; Daniel Alvarez-Hernandez; Rukshana Shroff; Xiaoke Yin; Karin H. Müller; Jeremy N. Skepper; Manuel Mayr; Chris Reutelingsperger; Adrian H. Chester; Sergio Bertazzo; Leon J. Schurgers; Catherine M. Shanahan
RATIONALE Matrix vesicles (MVs), secreted by vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs), form the first nidus for mineralization and fetuin-A, a potent circulating inhibitor of calcification, is specifically loaded into MVs. However, the processes of fetuin-A intracellular trafficking and MV biogenesis are poorly understood. OBJECTIVE The objective of this study is to investigate the regulation, and role, of MV biogenesis in VSMC calcification. METHODS AND RESULTS Alexa488-labeled fetuin-A was internalized by human VSMCs, trafficked via the endosomal system, and exocytosed from multivesicular bodies via exosome release. VSMC-derived exosomes were enriched with the tetraspanins CD9, CD63, and CD81, and their release was regulated by sphingomyelin phosphodiesterase 3. Comparative proteomics showed that VSMC-derived exosomes were compositionally similar to exosomes from other cell sources but also shared components with osteoblast-derived MVs including calcium-binding and extracellular matrix proteins. Elevated extracellular calcium was found to induce sphingomyelin phosphodiesterase 3 expression and the secretion of calcifying exosomes from VSMCs in vitro, and chemical inhibition of sphingomyelin phosphodiesterase 3 prevented VSMC calcification. In vivo, multivesicular bodies containing exosomes were observed in vessels from chronic kidney disease patients on dialysis, and CD63 was found to colocalize with calcification. Importantly, factors such as tumor necrosis factor-α and platelet derived growth factor-BB were also found to increase exosome production, leading to increased calcification of VSMCs in response to calcifying conditions. CONCLUSIONS This study identifies MVs as exosomes and shows that factors that can increase exosome release can promote vascular calcification in response to environmental calcium stress. Modulation of the exosome release pathway may be as a novel therapeutic target for prevention.
Trends in Cardiovascular Medicine | 2012
Alexander N. Kapustin; Catherine M. Shanahan
Vascular calcification is a pathological process common in patients with disorders of mineral metabolism and mediated by vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs). A key event in the initiation of VSMC calcification is the release of mineralization-competent matrix vesicles (MVs), small membrane-bound bodies with structural features enabling them to efficiently nucleate hydroxyapatite. These bodies are similar to MVs secreted by chondrocytes during bone development and their properties include the absence of calcification inhibitors, formation of nucleation sites, and accumulation of matrix metalloproteinases such as MMP-2. The mechanisms of MV biogenesis and loading remain poorly understood; however, emerging data have demonstrated that alterations in cytosolic calcium homeostasis can trigger multiple changes in MV composition that promote their mineralization.
Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2011
Alexander N. Kapustin; Catherine M. Shanahan
Osteocalcin, or bone Gla protein, is a small protein secreted by osteoblasts that can undergo γ-carboxylation. The γ-carboxylated form binds hydroxyapatite and is abundant in bone extracellular matrix. In contrast, the undercarboxylated circulating form has been implicated as a novel hormone and positive regulator of glucose homeostasis. Importantly, osteocalcin expression has been described in calcifying vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs), although the physiological significance of this observation has remained unclear. In this issue of Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology , Idelevich et al1 show that osteocalcin is potentially a novel regulator of osteochondrogenic differentiation of pathologically mineralizing VSMCs. They reveal that osteocalcin, via hypoxia-inducible factor 1α signaling, stimulates expression of osteochondrogenic transcription factors in VSMCs, as well as a shift in cellular metabolism toward glycolysis. This study provides the first evidence that osteocalcin may be an active player in vascular calcification, with its presence in the calcified vasculature, and potentially the circulation, activating novel signaling pathways that promote mineralization. See accompanying article: Idelevich A, Rais Y, Monsonego-Ornan E. Bone Gla protein increases HIF-1α-dependent glucose metabolism and induces cartilage and vascular calcification. Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol . 2011;31:e55–e71. Pathological mineralization of the vasculature has a detrimental effect on cardiovascular function and is associated with increased mortality in patients with aging, atherosclerosis, type 2 diabetes, and chronic kidney disease.2 Vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) orchestrate the mineralization process, which is mediated in part by their osteochondrocytic differentiation in the vessel wall. This phenotypic transition is characterized by expression of Runx2 and Sox9, master transcription factors that regulate bone and cartilage differentiation during developmental osteochondrogenesis, as well as other bone- and cartilage-specific proteins, many with undefined functions.3 One of these proteins, osteocalcin, is a small γ-carboxylated protein that is expressed by both osteoblasts and VSMCs and abundantly deposited …
Current Opinion in Pharmacology | 2009
Alexander N. Kapustin; Catherine M. Shanahan
Widespread vascular calcification is a ubiquitous feature of aging and is prevalent in association with a number of common pathologies including atherosclerosis, renal failure, and diabetes. Once thought of as innocuous, emerging evidence suggests that calcification is causal in precipitating vascular events and mediating chronic cardiovascular damage, independent of disease context. Importantly, a large body of data has shed light on the factors that favor the formation of calcification in vivo, as well as on the complex mechanisms that initiate and promote it. This has identified some novel targets and allowed for the possibility that calcification can potentially be blocked and ultimately regressed. Targets include local and circulating inhibitors of calcification as well as factors that may ameliorate vascular smooth muscle cell (VSMC) apoptosis. Despite this, the vasculature remains a difficult tissue to target and currently there are no effective treatments in general use. More crucially, any potential treatments will need to be carefully evaluated as they may impinge on bone metabolism. Our best hope for the near future is to normalize factors associated with accelerated calcification in pathologies such as renal failure where, aberrant mineral metabolism, as well as treatment regimes, may contribute to the initiation and progression of calcification.
The Journal of Physiology | 2016
Alexander N. Kapustin; Catherine M. Shanahan
Vascular smooth muscle cell (VSMC) phenotypic conversion from a contractile to ‘synthetic’ state contributes to vascular pathologies including restenosis, atherosclerosis and vascular calcification. We have recently found that the secretion of exosomes is a feature of ‘synthetic’ VSMCs and that exosomes are novel players in vascular repair processes as well as pathological vascular thrombosis and calcification. Pro‐inflammatory cytokines and growth factors as well as mineral imbalance stimulate exosome secretion by VSMCs, most likely by the activation of sphingomyelin phosphodiesterase 3 (SMPD3) and cytoskeletal remodelling. Calcium stress induces dramatic changes in VSMC exosome composition and accumulation of phosphatidylserine (PS), annexin A6 and matrix metalloproteinase‐2, which converts exosomes into a nidus for calcification. In addition, by presenting PS, VSMC exosomes can also provide the catalytic surface for the activation of coagulation factors. Recent data showing that VSMC exosomes are loaded with proteins and miRNA regulating cell adhesion and migration highlight VSMC exosomes as potentially important communication messengers in vascular repair. Thus, the identification of signalling pathways regulating VSMC exosome secretion, including activation of SMPD3 and cytoskeletal rearrangements, opens up novel avenues for a deeper understanding of vascular remodelling processes.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2017
Sarah R. Langley; Karin Willeit; Athanasios Didangelos; Ljubica Perisic Matic; Philipp Skroblin; Javier Barallobre-Barreiro; Mariette Lengquist; Gregor Rungger; Alexander N. Kapustin; Ludmilla Kedenko; Chris Molenaar; Ruifang Lu; Temo Barwari; Gonca Suna; Xiaoke Yin; Bernhard Iglseder; Bernhard Paulweber; Peter Willeit; Joseph Shalhoub; Gerard Pasterkamp; Alun H. Davies; Claudia Monaco; Ulf Hedin; Catherine M. Shanahan; Johann Willeit; Stefan Kiechl; Manuel Mayr
BACKGROUND. The identification of patients with high-risk atherosclerotic plaques prior to the manifestation of clinical events remains challenging. Recent findings question histology- and imaging-based definitions of the “vulnerable plaque,” necessitating an improved approach for predicting onset of symptoms. METHODS. We performed a proteomics comparison of the vascular extracellular matrix and associated molecules in human carotid endarterectomy specimens from 6 symptomatic versus 6 asymptomatic patients to identify a protein signature for high-risk atherosclerotic plaques. Proteomics data were integrated with gene expression profiling of 121 carotid endarterectomies and an analysis of protein secretion by lipid-loaded human vascular smooth muscle cells. Finally, epidemiological validation of candidate biomarkers was performed in two community-based studies. RESULTS. Proteomics and at least one of the other two approaches identified a molecular signature of plaques from symptomatic patients that comprised matrix metalloproteinase 9, chitinase 3-like-1, S100 calcium binding protein A8 (S100A8), S100A9, cathepsin B, fibronectin, and galectin-3-binding protein. Biomarker candidates measured in 685 subjects in the Bruneck study were associated with progression to advanced atherosclerosis and incidence of cardiovascular disease over a 10-year follow-up period. A 4-biomarker signature (matrix metalloproteinase 9, S100A8/S100A9, cathepsin D, and galectin-3-binding protein) improved risk prediction and was successfully replicated in an independent cohort, the SAPHIR study. CONCLUSION. The identified 4-biomarker signature may improve risk prediction and diagnostics for the management of cardiovascular disease. Further, our study highlights the strength of tissue-based proteomics for biomarker discovery. FUNDING. UK: British Heart Foundation (BHF); King’s BHF Center; and the National Institute for Health Research Biomedical Research Center based at Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust and King’s College London in partnership with King’s College Hospital. Austria: Federal Ministry for Transport, Innovation and Technology (BMVIT); Federal Ministry of Science, Research and Economy (BMWFW); Wirtschaftsagentur Wien; and Standortagentur Tirol.
Seminars in Dialysis | 2015
Nihil Chitalia; Louise Ross; Mahesh Krishnamoorthy; Alexander N. Kapustin; Catherine M. Shanahan; Juan Carlos Kaski; Prabir Roy-Chaudhury; Eric S. Chemla; Debasish Banerjee
The nature of arterial changes resulting in cardiovascular events and dialysis vascular access failures in adult predialysis patients is not well known. This study examined intimal changes, calcium deposition, and consequent stiffness in brachial and radial arteries of adult CKD patients. Ten brachial‐artery and seven radial‐artery specimens were obtained during fistula creation from nine predialysis and eight dialysis‐dependent, nondiabetic patients; and age‐gender matched controls undergoing coronary bypass grafts (6 radial) or kidney donation (6 renal). Arterial stiffness was measured at baseline. Vessel histology, morphometric analysis of intima‐media, and direct quantification of calcium load was performed using standard techniques. Both predialysis and dialysis patients demonstrated significant arterial intimal hyperplasia with intima:media ratio higher than controls (0.13 ± 0.12 vs. 0.02 ± 0.05, p = 0.01). Calcium deposition was demonstrated on histology and the calcium content in patients was higher than controls (34.68 ± 26.86 vs. 10.95 ± 9.18 μg/μg, p = 0.003). The blood vessel calcium content correlated with arterial stiffness (r = 0.64, p = 0.018). This study for the first time describes, and suggests mechanistic linkage between, intimal hyperplasia, pathological calcium deposition, and increased functional arterial stiffness in dialysis and predialysis patients. Our research could serve as a unique window into the in vivo status of the uremic vasculature impacting fistula maturation and cardiovascular disease.
Nature Cell Biology | 2018
Arnau Hervera; Francesco De Virgiliis; Ilaria Palmisano; Luming Zhou; Elena Tantardini; Guiping Kong; Thomas H. Hutson; Matt C. Danzi; Rotem Ben-Tov Perry; Celio X.C. Santos; Alexander N. Kapustin; Roland A. Fleck; José Antonio del Río; Thomas Carroll; Vance Lemmon; John L Bixby; Ajay M. Shah; Mike Fainzilber; Simone Di Giovanni
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) contribute to tissue damage and remodelling mediated by the inflammatory response after injury. Here we show that ROS, which promote axonal dieback and degeneration after injury, are also required for axonal regeneration and functional recovery after spinal injury. We find that ROS production in the injured sciatic nerve and dorsal root ganglia requires CX3CR1-dependent recruitment of inflammatory cells. Next, exosomes containing functional NADPH oxidase 2 complexes are released from macrophages and incorporated into injured axons via endocytosis. Once in axonal endosomes, active NOX2 is retrogradely transported to the cell body through an importin-β1–dynein-dependent mechanism. Endosomal NOX2 oxidizes PTEN, which leads to its inactivation, thus stimulating PI3K–phosporylated (p-)Akt signalling and regenerative outgrowth. Challenging the view that ROS are exclusively involved in nerve degeneration, we propose a previously unrecognized role of ROS in mammalian axonal regeneration through a NOX2–PI3K–p-Akt signalling pathway.Hervera et al. show that extracellular vesicles containing NOX2 complexes are released from macrophages and incorporated into injured axons, leading to axonal regeneration through PI3K–p-Akt signalling.
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Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Foundation Trust
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