|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : De-novo collateral formation following acute myocardial infarction: Dependence on CCR2⁺ bone marrow cells.

First Author  Zhang H Year  2015
Journal  J Mol Cell Cardiol Volume  87
Pages  4-16 PubMed ID  26254180
Mgi Jnum  J:251579 Mgi Id  MGI:6102001
Doi  10.1016/j.yjmcc.2015.07.020 Citation  Zhang H, et al. (2015) De-novo collateral formation following acute myocardial infarction: Dependence on CCR2(+) bone marrow cells. J Mol Cell Cardiol 87:4-16
abstractText  Wide variation exists in the extent (number and diameter) of native pre-existing collaterals in tissues of different strains of mice, with supportive indirect evidence recently appearing for humans. This variation is a major determinant of the wide variation in severity of tissue injury in occlusive vascular disease. Whether such genetic-dependent variation also exists in the heart is unknown because no model exists for study of mouse coronary collaterals. Also owing to methodological limitations, it is not known if ischemia can induce new coronary collaterals to form ("neo-collaterals") versus remodeling of pre-existing ones. The present study sought to develop a model to study coronary collaterals in mice, determine whether neo-collateral formation occurs, and investigate the responsible mechanisms. Four strains with known rank-ordered differences in collateral extent in brain and skeletal muscle were studied: C57BLKS>C57BL/6>A/J>BALB/c. Unexpectedly, these and 5 additional strains lacked native coronary collaterals. However after ligation, neo-collaterals formed rapidly within 1-to-2 days, reaching their maximum extent in </=7 days. Rank-order for neo-collateral formation differed from the above: C57BL/6>BALB/c>C57BLKS>A/J. Collateral network conductance, infarct volume(-1), and contractile function followed this same rank-order. Neo-collateral formation and collateral conductance were reduced and infarct volume increased in MCP1(-/-) and CCR2(-/-) mice. Bone-marrow transplant rescued collateral formation in CCR2(-/-) mice. Involvement of fractalkineCX3CR1 signaling and endothelial cell proliferation were also identified. This study introduces a model for investigating the coronary collateral circulation in mice, demonstrates that neo-collaterals form rapidly after coronary occlusion, and finds that MCPCCR2-mediated recruitment of myeloid cells is required for this process.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

2 Authors

2 Bio Entities

Trail: Publication

0 Expression