Abstract

This study investigates the long-term angiogenic effects of ANG-1 and VEGF in a swine chronic myocardial ischemia model. Four-weeks after gradual occlusion of the left circumflex coronary artery by ameroid constrictor, animals were injected with recombinant adenoviral vectors carrying either human ANG-1 (n=9), human VEGF(165) (n=10) or empty vector (n=7) into the left ventricle free wall supplied by the constricted artery. Left ventricular perfusion in animals that received AdANG-1 (3.25+/-0.16 ml/min/g, p<0.05) recovered robustly 4 weeks after gene transfer while ischemia persisted in the AdVEGF (1.09+/-0.13 ml/min/g) and empty vector (1.20+/-0.03 ml/min/g) groups. Microvascular densities in the left ventricles of animals that received AdANG-1 (19.61+/-1.76/0.572 mm(2) myocardial tissue, p<0.05) and AdVEGF (18.17+/-1.43/0.572 mm(2) myocardial tissue, p<0.05) were significantly higher than animals that received empty vector (13.53+/-0.92/0.572 mm(2) myocardial tissue) 12 weeks after gene transfer. ANG-1, but not VEGF, contributed to enhanced regional perfusion by increasing arteriolar density (1.9+/-0.4/0.572 mm(2) myocardial tissue vs. 0.7+/-0.2/0.572 mm(2) myocardial tissue, p<0.05) of large-sized (50-100 microm) arterioles. These data demonstrate that gene transfer of ANG-1 and VEGF enhances angiogenesis, but ANG-1 promotes sustained improvement of ventricular perfusion that expedites recovery of ischemic myocardium via arteriogenesis.

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