Litcius/Paper detail

Autophagy at the interface of endothelial cell homeostasis and vascular disease

Eleonora Mameli, Andrea Martello, Andrea Caporali

2021FEBS Journal87 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Autophagy is an essential intracellular process for cellular quality control. It enables cell homeostasis through the selective degradation of harmful protein aggregates and damaged organelles. Autophagy is essential for recycling nutrients, generating energy to maintain cell viability in most tissues and during adverse conditions such as hypoxia/ischaemia. The progressive understanding of the mechanisms modulating autophagy in the vasculature has recently led numerous studies to link intact autophagic responses with endothelial cell (EC) homeostasis and function. Preserved autophagic flux within the ECs has an essential role in maintaining their physiological characteristics, whereas defective autophagy can promote endothelial pro-inflammatory and atherogenic phenotype. However, we still lack a good knowledge of the complete molecular repertoire controlling various aspects of endothelial autophagy and how this is associated with vascular diseases. Here, we provide an overview of the current state of the art of autophagy in ECs. We review the discoveries that have so far defined autophagy as an essential mechanism in vascular biology and analyse how autophagy influences ECs behaviour in vascular disease. Finally, we emphasise opportunities for compounds to regulate autophagy in ECs and discuss the challenges of exploiting them to resolve vascular disease.

Topics & Concepts

AutophagyCell biologyBiologyHomeostasisMitophagyIntracellularEndothelial stem cellOrganelleFlux (metallurgy)ChemistryBiochemistryApoptosisIn vitroOrganic chemistryAutophagy in Disease and Therapy