Abstract

Atherosclerosis is associated with increased lipid peroxidation, leading to generation of multiple oxidation-specific epitopes (OSEs), contributing to the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis and its clinical manifestation. Oxidized cholesteryl esters (OxCEs) are a major class of OSEs found in human plasma and atherosclerotic tissue. To evaluate OxCEs as a candidate biomarker, we generated a novel mouse monoclonal Ab (mAb) specific to an OxCE modification of proteins. The mAb AG23 (IgG1) was raised in C57BL6 mice immunized with OxCE-modified keyhole limpet hemocyanin, and hybridomas were screened against OxCE-modified BSA. This method ensures mAb specificity to the OxCE modification, independent of a carrier protein. AG23 specifically stained human carotid artery atherosclerotic lesions. An ELISA method, with AG23 as a capture and either anti-apoAI or anti-apoB-100 as the detection Abs, was developed to assay apoAI and apoB-100 lipoproteins that have one or more OxCE epitopes. OxCE-apoA or OxCE-apoB did not correlate with the well-established oxidized phospholipid-apoB biomarker. In a cohort of subjects treated with atorvastatin, OxCE-apoA was significantly lower than in the placebo group, independent of the apoAI levels. These results suggest the potential diagnostic utility of a new biomarker assay to measure OxCE-modified lipoproteins in patients with CVD.

Highlights

  • Atherosclerosis is associated with increased lipid peroxidation, leading to generation of multiple oxidationspecific epitopes (OSEs), contributing to the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis and its clinical manifestation

  • We suggest that oxidized cholesteryl ester (OxCE) is a major damage-associated molecular pattern (DAMP) arising in hypercholesterolemic animals and human subjects, which contributes to vascular inflammation and atherogenesis [4, 15]

  • AG23 binding to two other common oxidation-specific epitopes (OSEs), malondialdehyde (MDA)modified LDL and oxidized phospholipid (OxPL) enriched in copper-oxidized LDL (CuOxLDL), was negligible (Fig. 2B)

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Summary

Introduction

Atherosclerosis is associated with increased lipid peroxidation, leading to generation of multiple oxidationspecific epitopes (OSEs), contributing to the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis and its clinical manifestation. In protocol 1, plates were coated with 5 g/ml of MB47, a mouse monoclonal specific for human apoB-100 [22], or with a sheep anti-human apoAI polyclonal Ab (Binding Site, Birmingham, UK) overnight at 4°C, followed by blocking with 1% BSA-TBS for 30 min at room temperature.

Results
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