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Publication : No Significant Role for Smooth Muscle Cell Mineralocorticoid Receptors in Atherosclerosis in the Apolipoprotein-E Knockout Mouse Model.

First Author  Moss ME Year  2018
Journal  Front Cardiovasc Med Volume  5
Pages  81 PubMed ID  30038907
Mgi Jnum  J:290179 Mgi Id  MGI:6437647
Doi  10.3389/fcvm.2018.00081 Citation  Moss ME, et al. (2018) No Significant Role for Smooth Muscle Cell Mineralocorticoid Receptors in Atherosclerosis in the Apolipoprotein-E Knockout Mouse Model. Front Cardiovasc Med 5:81
abstractText  Objective: Elevated levels of the hormone aldosterone are associated with increased risk of myocardial infarction and stroke in humans and increased progression and inflammation of atherosclerotic plaques in animal models. Aldosterone acts through the mineralocorticoid receptor (MR) which is expressed in vascular smooth muscle cells (SMCs) where it promotes SMC calcification and chemokine secretion in vitro. The objective of this study is to explore the role of the MR specifically in SMCs in the progression of atherosclerosis and the associated vascular inflammation in vivo in the apolipoprotein E knockout (ApoE(-/-)) mouse model. Methods and Results: Male ApoE(-/-) mice were bred with mice in which MR could be deleted specifically from SMCs by tamoxifen injection. The resulting atheroprone SMC-MR-KO mice were compared to their MR-Intact littermates after high fat diet (HFD) feeding for 8 or 16 weeks or normal diet for 12 months. Body weight, tail cuff blood pressure, heart and spleen weight, and serum levels of glucose, cholesterol, and aldosterone were measured for all mice at the end of the treatment period. Serial histologic sections of the aortic root were stained with Oil Red O to assess plaque size, lipid content, and necrotic core area; with PicroSirius Red for quantification of collagen content; by immunofluorescent staining with anti-Mac2/Galectin-3 and anti-smooth muscle alpha-actin antibodies to assess inflammation and SMC marker expression; and with Von Kossa stain to detect plaque calcification. In the 16-week HFD study, these analyses were also performed in sections from the brachiocephalic artery. Flow cytometry of cell suspensions derived from the aortic arch was also performed to quantify vascular inflammation after 8 and 16 weeks of HFD. Deletion of the MR specifically from SMCs did not significantly change plaque size, lipid content, necrotic core, collagen content, inflammatory staining, actin staining, or calcification, nor were there differences in the extent of vascular inflammation between MR-Intact and SMC-MR-KO mice in the three experiments. Conclusion: SMC-MR does not directly contribute to the formation, progression, or inflammation of atherosclerotic plaques in the ApoE(-/-) mouse model of atherosclerosis. This indicates that the MR in non-SMCs mediates the pro-atherogenic effects of MR activation.
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