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PAK1 Silencing Attenuated Proinflammatory Macrophage Activation and Foam Cell Formation by Increasing PPAR<i>γ</i> Expression

Wenlin Cheng, Quan Zhang, Bo Li, Jianlei Cao, Lin Jiao, Sheng-ping Chao, Zhibing Lu, Fang Zhao

2021Oxidative Medicine and Cellular Longevity16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Macrophage polarization in response to environmental cues has emerged as an important event in the development of atherosclerosis. Compelling evidences suggest that P21‐activated kinases 1 (PAK1) is involved in a wide variety of diseases. However, the potential role and mechanism of PAK1 in regulation of macrophage polarization remains to be elucidated. Here, we observed that PAK1 showed a dramatically increased expression in M1 macrophages but decreased expression in M2 macrophages by using a well‐established in vitro model to study heterogeneity of macrophage polarization. Adenovirus‐mediated loss-of-function approach demonstrated that PAK1 silencing induced an M2 macrophage phenotype‐associated gene profiles but repressed the phenotypic markers related to M1 macrophage polarization. Additionally, dramatically decreased foam cell formation was found in PAK1 silencing‐induced M2 macrophage activation which was accompanied with alternation of marker account for cholesterol efflux or influx from macrophage foam cells. Moderate results in lipid metabolism and foam cell formation were found in M1 macrophage activation mediated by AdshPAK1. Importantly, we presented mechanistic evidence that PAK1 knockdown promoted the expression of PPAR γ , and the effect of macrophage activation regulated by PAK1 silencing was largely reversed when a PPAR γ antagonist was utilized. Collectively, these findings reveal that PAK1 is an independent effector of macrophage polarization at least partially attributed to regulation of PPAR γ expression, which suggested PAK1‐PPAR γ axis as a novel therapeutic strategy in atherosclerosis management.

Topics & Concepts

Macrophage polarizationFoam cellGene silencingCell biologyMacrophageGene knockdownPAK1BiologyProinflammatory cytokineM2 MacrophageKinaseChemistryCell cultureInflammationImmunologyIn vitroBiochemistryGeneticsGeneImmune cells in cancerAdipokines, Inflammation, and Metabolic DiseasesPeroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptors
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