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Publication : Myeloid cell-specific Irf5 deficiency stabilizes atherosclerotic plaques in Apoe<sup>-/-</sup> mice.

First Author  Leipner J Year  2021
Journal  Mol Metab Volume  53
Pages  101250 PubMed ID  33991749
Mgi Jnum  J:317327 Mgi Id  MGI:6813678
Doi  10.1016/j.molmet.2021.101250 Citation  Leipner J, et al. (2021) Myeloid cell-specific Irf5 deficiency stabilizes atherosclerotic plaques in Apoe(-/-) mice. Mol Metab 53:101250
abstractText  OBJECTIVE: Interferon regulatory factor (IRF) 5 is a transcription factor known for promoting M1 type macrophage polarization in vitro. Given the central role of inflammatory macrophages in promoting atherosclerotic plaque progression, we hypothesize that myeloid cell-specific deletion of IRF5 is protective against atherosclerosis. METHODS: Female Apoe(-/-)Lysm(Cre/+)Irf5(fl/fl) and Apoe(-/-)Irf5(fl/fl) mice were fed a high-cholesterol diet for three months. Atherosclerotic plaque size and compositions as well as inflammatory gene expression were analyzed. Mechanistically, IRF5-dependent bone marrow-derived macrophage cytokine profiles were tested under M1 and M2 polarizing conditions. Mixed bone marrow chimeras were generated to determine intrinsic IRF5-dependent effects on macrophage accumulation in atherosclerotic plaques. RESULTS: Myeloid cell-specific Irf5 deficiency blunted LPS/IFNgamma-induced inflammatory gene expression in vitro and in the atherosclerotic aorta in vivo. While atherosclerotic lesion size was not reduced in myeloid cell-specific Irf5-deficient Apoe(-/-) mice, plaque composition was favorably altered, resembling a stable plaque phenotype with reduced macrophage and lipid contents, reduced inflammatory gene expression and increased collagen deposition alongside elevated Mertk and Tgfbeta expression. Irf5-deficient macrophages, when directly competing with wild type macrophages in the same mouse, were less prone to accumulate in atherosclerotic lesion, independent of monocyte recruitment. Irf5-deficient monocytes, when exposed to oxidized low density lipoprotein, were less likely to differentiate into macrophage foam cells, and Irf5-deficient macrophages proliferated less in the plaque. CONCLUSION: Our study provides genetic evidence that selectively altering macrophage polarization induces a stable plaque phenotype in mice.
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