Exercise-induced angiogenesis is dependent on metabolically primed ATF3/4+ endothelial cells
Abstract
Exercise is a powerful driver of physiological angiogenesis during adulthood, but the mechanisms of exercise-induced vascular expansion are poorly understood. We explored endothelial heterogeneity in skeletal muscle and identified two capillary muscle endothelial cell (mEC) populations that are characterized by differential expression of ATF3/4. Spatial mapping showed that ATF3/4+ mECs are enriched in red oxidative muscle areas while ATF3/4low ECs lie adjacent to white glycolytic fibers. In vitro and in vivo experiments revealed that red ATF3/4+ mECs are more angiogenic when compared with white ATF3/4low mECs. Mechanistically, ATF3/4 in mECs control genes involved in amino acid uptake and metabolism and metabolically prime red (ATF3/4+) mECs for angiogenesis. As a consequence, supplementation of non-essential amino acids and overexpression of ATF4 increased proliferation of white mECs. Finally, deleting Atf4 in ECs impaired exercise-induced angiogenesis. Our findings illustrate that spatial metabolic angiodiversity determines the angiogenic potential of muscle ECs. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000500514Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Cell MetabolismVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
Cell PressSubject
single-cell RNA-Seq; exercise; endothelial metabolism; endothelial heterogeneity; amino acid metabolism; muscle angiogenesisOrganisational unit
09560 - De Bock, Katrien / De Bock, Katrien
02207 - Functional Genomics Center Zurich / Functional Genomics Center Zurich
Funding
716140 - Understanding the metabolic cross-talk between the muscle and the endothelium: implications for exercise training and insulin sensitivity (EC)
176056 - Understanding Exercise-Induced Endothelial Metabolic Reprogramming To Promote Ischemic Revascularization (SNF)
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