Description

Metabolic dysregulation, including perturbed glutamine-glutamate homeostasis, is common among patients with cardiovascular diseases, but the underlying mechanisms remain largely unknown. Using the human MESA cohort, here we show that plasma glutamine-glutamate ratio is an independent risk factor for carotid plaque progression. Mice deficient in glutaminase-2 (Gls2), the enzyme that mediates hepatic glutaminolysis, developed accelerated atherosclerosis and susceptibility to catastrophic cardiac events, while Gls2 overexpression partially protected from disease progression. High-throughput transcriptional profiling and high-resolution structural biology imaging of aortas showed that Gls2 deficiency perturbed extracellular matrix composition and increased vessel stiffness. This results from an imbalance of glutamine- and glutamate-dependent cross-linked proteins within atherosclerotic lesions and cellular remodeling of plaques. Thus, hepatic glutaminolysis functions as a potent regulator of glutamine homeostasis, which affects the aortic wall structure during atherosclerotic plaque progression.