Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1080/15548627.2021.2021494
Title: Caffeine prevents restenosis and inhibits vascular smooth muscle cell proliferation through the induction of autophagy
Authors: Tripathi, Madhulika 
Singh, Brijesh Kumar 
Liehn, Elisa A
Lim, Sheau Yng 
Tikno, Keziah
Castano-Mayan, David 
Rattanasopa, Chutima 
Nilcham, Pakhwan
Ghani, Siti Aishah Binte Abdul 
Wu, Zihao
Azhar, Syaza Hazwany
Zhou, Jin 
Hernandez-Resendiz, Sauri 
Crespo-Avilan, Gustavo E 
Sinha, Rohit Anthony 
Farah, Benjamin Livingston
Moe, Kyaw Thu
De Silva, Deidre Anne
Angeli, Veronique
Singh, Manvendra K
Singaraja, Roshni R 
Hausenloy, Derek J
Yen, Paul Michael 
Keywords: Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Cell Biology
Aortic smooth muscle cell proliferation
autophagy
caffeine
vascular injury model
WNT signaling
BALLOON ANGIOPLASTY
ACTIVATION
PATHWAY
COFFEE
PATHOLOGY
DISEASE
TARGET
DRUG
Issue Date: 12-Jan-2022
Publisher: TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
Citation: Tripathi, Madhulika, Singh, Brijesh Kumar, Liehn, Elisa A, Lim, Sheau Yng, Tikno, Keziah, Castano-Mayan, David, Rattanasopa, Chutima, Nilcham, Pakhwan, Ghani, Siti Aishah Binte Abdul, Wu, Zihao, Azhar, Syaza Hazwany, Zhou, Jin, Hernandez-Resendiz, Sauri, Crespo-Avilan, Gustavo E, Sinha, Rohit Anthony, Farah, Benjamin Livingston, Moe, Kyaw Thu, De Silva, Deidre Anne, Angeli, Veronique, Singh, Manvendra K, Singaraja, Roshni R, Hausenloy, Derek J, Yen, Paul Michael (2022-01-12). Caffeine prevents restenosis and inhibits vascular smooth muscle cell proliferation through the induction of autophagy. AUTOPHAGY. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1080/15548627.2021.2021494
Abstract: Caffeine is among the most highly consumed substances worldwide, and it has been associated with decreased cardiovascular risk. Although caffeine has been shown to inhibit the proliferation of vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs), the mechanism underlying this effect is unknown. Here, we demonstrated that caffeine decreased VSMC proliferation and induced macroautophagy/autophagy in an in vivo vascular injury model of restenosis. Furthermore, we studied the effects of caffeine in primary human and mouse aortic VSMCs and immortalized mouse aortic VSMCs. Caffeine decreased cell proliferation, and induced autophagy flux via inhibition of MTOR signaling in these cells. Genetic deletion of the key autophagy gene Atg5, and the Sqstm1/p62 gene encoding a receptor protein, showed that the anti-proliferative effect by caffeine was dependent upon autophagy. Interestingly, caffeine also decreased WNT-signaling and the expression of two WNT target genes, Axin2 and Ccnd1 (cyclin D1). This effect was mediated by autophagic degradation of a key member of the WNT signaling cascade, DVL2, by caffeine to decrease WNT signaling and cell proliferation. SQSTM1/p62, MAP1LC3B-II and DVL2 were also shown to interact with each other, and the overexpression of DVL2 counteracted the inhibition of cell proliferation by caffeine. Taken together, our in vivo and in vitro findings demonstrated that caffeine reduced VSMC proliferation by inhibiting WNT signaling via stimulation of autophagy, thus reducing the vascular restenosis. Our findings suggest that caffeine and other autophagy-inducing drugs may represent novel cardiovascular therapeutic tools to protect against restenosis after angioplasty and/or stent placement.
Source Title: AUTOPHAGY
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/226733
ISSN: 15548627
15548635
DOI: 10.1080/15548627.2021.2021494
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