High plasma concentrations of acyl-coenzyme A binding protein (ACBP) predispose to cardiovascular disease: Evidence for a phylogenetically conserved proaging function of ACBP

血浆中酰基辅酶A结合蛋白(ACBP)浓度升高易导致心血管疾病:ACBP具有系统发育保守的促衰老功能的证据

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作者:Léa Montégut ,Adrien Joseph ,Hui Chen ,Mahmoud Abdellatif ,Christoph Ruckenstuhl ,Omar Motiño ,Flavia Lambertucci ,Gerasimos Anagnostopoulos ,Sylvie Lachkar ,Silvia Dichtinger ,Maria Chiara Maiuri ,François Goldwasser ,Benoit Blanchet ,Frédéric Fumeron ,Isabelle Martins ,Frank Madeo ,Guido Kroemer

Abstract

Autophagy defects accelerate aging, while stimulation of autophagy decelerates aging. Acyl-coenzyme A binding protein (ACBP), which is encoded by a diazepam-binding inhibitor (DBI), acts as an extracellular feedback regulator of autophagy. As shown here, knockout of the gene coding for the yeast orthologue of ACBP/DBI (ACB1) improves chronological aging, and this effect is reversed by knockout of essential autophagy genes (ATG5, ATG7) but less so by knockout of an essential mitophagy gene (ATG32). In humans, ACBP/DBI levels independently correlate with body mass index (BMI) as well as with chronological age. In still-healthy individuals, we find that high ACBP/DBI levels correlate with future cardiovascular events (such as heart surgery, myocardial infarction, and stroke), an association that is independent of BMI and chronological age, suggesting that ACBP/DBI is indeed a biomarker of "biological" aging. Concurringly, ACBP/DBI plasma concentrations correlate with established cardiovascular risk factors (fasting glucose levels, systolic blood pressure, total free cholesterol, triglycerides), but are inversely correlated with atheroprotective high-density lipoprotein (HDL). In mice, neutralization of ACBP/DBI through a monoclonal antibody attenuates anthracycline-induced cardiotoxicity, which is a model of accelerated heart aging. In conclusion, plasma elevation of ACBP/DBI constitutes a novel biomarker of chronological aging and facets of biological aging with a prognostic value in cardiovascular disease. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04879316.

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