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High-protein diets increase cardiovascular risk by activating macrophage mTOR to suppress mitophagy.

Citation
Zhang, X., et al. “High-Protein Diets Increase Cardiovascular Risk By Activating Macrophage Mtor To Suppress Mitophagy.”. Nature Metabolism, pp. 110-125.
Center Washington University in St Louis
Author Xiangyu Zhang, Ismail Sergin, Trent D Evans, Se-Jin Jeong, Astrid Rodriguez-Velez, Divya Kapoor, Sunny Chen, Eric Song, Karyn B Holloway, Jan R Crowley, Slava Epelman, Conrad C Weihl, Abhinav Diwan, Daping Fan, Bettina Mittendorfer, Nathan O Stitziel, Joel D Schilling, Irfan J Lodhi, Babak Razani
Abstract

High protein diets are commonly utilized for weight loss, yet have been reported to raise cardiovascular risk. The mechanisms underlying this risk are unknown. Here, we show that dietary protein drives atherosclerosis and lesion complexity. Protein ingestion acutely elevates amino acid levels in blood and atherosclerotic plaques, stimulating macrophage mTOR signaling. This is causal in plaque progression as the effects of dietary protein are abrogated in macrophage-specific Raptor-null mice. Mechanistically, we find amino acids exacerbate macrophage apoptosis induced by atherogenic lipids, a process that involves mTORC1-dependent inhibition of mitophagy, accumulation of dysfunctional mitochondria, and mitochondrial apoptosis. Using macrophage-specific mTORC1- and autophagy-deficient mice we confirm this amino acid-mTORC1-autophagy signaling axis in vivo. Our data provide the first insights into the deleterious impact of excessive protein ingestion on macrophages and atherosclerotic progression. Incorporation of these concepts in clinical studies will be important to define the vascular effects of protein-based weight loss regimens.

Year of Publication
2020
Journal
Nature metabolism
Volume
2
Issue
1
Number of Pages
110-125
Date Published
01/2020
ISSN Number
2522-5812
DOI
10.1038/s42255-019-0162-4
Alternate Journal
Nat Metab
PMID
32128508
PMCID
PMC7053091
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