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Publication : Increased cell and matrix accumulation during atherogenesis in mice with vessel wall-specific deletion of discoidin domain receptor 1.

First Author  Franco C Year  2010
Journal  Circ Res Volume  106
Issue  11 Pages  1775-83
PubMed ID  20448217 Mgi Jnum  J:172702
Mgi Id  MGI:5008550 Doi  10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.109.213637
Citation  Franco C, et al. (2010) Increased cell and matrix accumulation during atherogenesis in mice with vessel wall-specific deletion of discoidin domain receptor 1. Circ Res 106(11):1775-83
abstractText  RATIONALE: Discoidin domain receptor (DDR)1 is a collagen receptor expressed on both smooth muscle cells (SMCs) and macrophages, where it plays important roles regulating cell and matrix accumulation during atherogenesis. Systemic deletion of DDR1 resulted in attenuated plaque growth but accelerated matrix accumulation in LDLR-deficient mice. Deletion of DDR1 solely on bone marrow-derived cells resulted in decreased macrophage accumulation and plaque growth but no change in matrix accumulation. OBJECTIVE: These findings led us to hypothesize that accelerated matrix accumulation was attributable to the increased synthetic ability of Ddr1(-/-) resident vascular wall SMCs. METHODS AND RESULTS: We used bone marrow transplantation to generate chimeric mice and investigate the role of SMC DDR1 during atherogenesis. Mice with deficiency of DDR1 in vessel wall-derived cells (Ddr1(+/+-->-/-)) or control mice (Ddr1(+/+-->+/+)) were fed an atherogenic diet for 12 weeks. We observed a 3.8-fold increase in the size of aortic sinus plaques in Ddr1(+/+-->-/-) compared to Ddr1(+/+-->+/+) mice. This was attributed to pronounced accumulation of collagen, elastin, proteoglycans, and fibronectin and resulted in a thickened fibrous cap. The enhanced matrix accumulation decreased the proportion of plaque area occupied by cells but was associated with a shift in the cellular composition of the lesions toward increased numbers of vessel wall-derived SMCs compared to bone marrow-derived macrophages. In vitro studies confirmed that Ddr1(-/-) SMCs expressed more matrix, proliferated more, and migrated farther than Ddr1(+/+) SMCs. CONCLUSIONS: DDR1 expression on resident vessel wall SMCs limits proliferation, migration and matrix accumulation during atherogenesis.
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