ORIGINAL ARTICLE
Plasminogen‐induced foam cell formation by macrophages occurs through a histone 2B (H2B)‐PAR1 pathway and requires integrity of clathrin‐coated pits

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Abstract

Objective

Plasminogen/plasmin is a serine protease system primarily responsible for degrading fibrin within blood clots. Plasminogen mediates its functions by interacting with plasminogen receptors on the cell surface. H2B, one such plasminogen receptor, is found on the surface of several cell types including macrophages. Both basic and clinical studies support the role of plasminogen in the process of foam cell formation (FCF), a hallmark of atherosclerosis. Growing evidence also implicates serine protease‐activated receptors (PARs) in atherosclerosis. These receptors are also found on macrophages, and plasmin is capable of activating PAR1 and PAR4. The goal of this study was to determine the extent of H2B's contribution to plasminogen‐mediated FCF by macrophages and if PARs are involved in this process.

Approach and Results

Treating macrophages with plasminogen increases their oxidized low‐density lipoprotein uptake and plasminogen‐mediated foam cell formation (Plg‐FCF) significantly. The magnitude of Plg‐FCF correlates with cell‐surface expression of the H2B level. H2B blockade or downregulation reduces Plg‐FCF, whereas its overexpression or high endogenous levels increases Plg‐FCF. Modulating PAR1 level in mouse macrophages affects Plg‐FCF. Activation/overexpression of PAR1 increases and its blockade/knockdown reduces this response. Confocal imaging indicates that both H2B and PAR1 colocalize with clathrin coated pits on the surface of macrophages, and reducing expression of clathrin or interfering with the clathrin‐coated pits integrity reduces Plg‐FCF.

Conclusion

Our data indicate that the magnitude of Plg‐FCF by macrophages is proportional to the H2B levels and demonstrate for the first time that PAR1 is involved in this process and that the integrity of clathrin‐coated pits is required for the full effect of Plg‐induced FCF.

Keywords

plasminogen
histone H2B
macrophages
plasminogen‐mediated foam cell formation
protease activated receptor 1
oxidized low density lipoprotein

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Manuscript handled by: Patricia Liaw

Final decision: Patricia Liaw, 12 January 2021

The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health.

Funding informationThis research was supported in part by grant 5P01HL0764915 from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD. This work used the Leica SP8 confocal microscope purchased with funding from National Institutes of Health SIG grant 1S10OD019972‐01.