|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Endoglin haplo-insufficiency modifies the inflammatory response in irradiated mouse hearts without affecting structural and mircovascular changes.

First Author  Seemann I Year  2013
Journal  PLoS One Volume  8
Issue  7 Pages  e68922
PubMed ID  23894375 Mgi Jnum  J:204708
Mgi Id  MGI:5538458 Doi  10.1371/journal.pone.0068922
Citation  Seemann I, et al. (2013) Endoglin haplo-insufficiency modifies the inflammatory response in irradiated mouse hearts without affecting structural and mircovascular changes. PLoS One 8(7):e68922
abstractText  BACKGROUND: It is now widely recognized that radiotherapy of thoracic and chest wall tumors increases the long-term risk of cardiovascular damage although the underlying mechanisms are not fully elucidated. There is increasing evidence that microvascular damage is involved. Endoglin, an accessory receptor for TGF-beta1, is highly expressed in damaged endothelial cells and may play a crucial role in cell proliferation and revascularization of damaged heart tissue. We have therefore specifically examined the role of endoglin in microvascular damage and repair in the irradiated heart. MATERIALS & METHODS: A single dose of 16 Gy was delivered to the heart of adult Eng(+/+) or Eng(+/-) mice and damage was evaluated at 4, 20 and 40 weeks, relative to age-matched controls. Gated single photon emission computed tomography (gSPECT) was used to measure cardiac geometry and function, and related to histo-morphology, microvascular damage (detected using immuno- and enzyme-histochemistry) and gene expression (detected by microarray and real time PCR). RESULTS: Genes categorized according to known inflammatory and immunological related disease were less prominently regulated in irradiated Eng(+/-) mice compared to Eng(+/+) littermates. Fibrosis related genes, TGF-beta1, ALK 5 and PDGF, were only upregulated in Eng(+/+) mice during the early phase of radiation-induced cardiac damage (4 weeks). In addition, only the Eng(+/+) mice showed significant upregulation of collagen deposition in the early fibrotic phase (20 weeks) after irradiation. Despite these differences in gene expression, there was no reduction in inflammatory invasion (CD45+cells) of irradiated Eng(+/-) hearts. Microvascular damage (microvascular density, alkaline phosphatase and von-Willebrand-Factor expression) was also similar in both strains. CONCLUSION: Eng(+/-) mice displayed impaired early inflammatory and fibrotic responses to high dose irradiation compared to Eng(+/+) littermates. This did not result in significant differences in microvascular damage or cardiac function between the strains.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

3 Bio Entities

Trail: Publication

0 Expression