Abstract

Allograft coronary disease is the dominant cause of increased risk of death after cardiac transplantation. While the percutaneous insertion of stents is the most efficacious revascularization strategy for allograft coronary disease there is a high incidence of stent renarrowing. We developed a novel rabbit model of sex-mismatched allograft vascular disease as well as the response to stent implantation. In situ hybridization for the Y-chromosome was employed to detect male cells in the neointima of stented allograft, and the population of recipient derived neointimal cells was measured by quantitative polymerase chain reaction and characterized by immunohistochemistry. To demonstrate the participation of circulatory derived cells in stent neointima formation we infused ex vivo labeled peripheral blood mononuclear cells into native rabbit carotid arteries immediately after stenting. Fourteen days after stenting the neointima area was 58% greater in the stented vs. non-stented allograft segments (p = 0.02). Male cells were detected in the neointima of stented female-to-male allografts. Recipient-derived cells constituted 72.1±5.7% and 81.5±4.2% of neointimal cell population in the non-stented and stented segments, respectively and the corresponding proliferation rates were only 2.7±0.5% and 2.3±0.2%. Some of the recipient-derived neointimal cells were of endothelial lineage. The ex vivo tagged cells constituted 9.0±0.4% of the cells per high power field in the stent neointima 14 days after stenting. These experiments provide important quantitative data regarding the degree to which host-derived blood-borne cells contribute to neointima formation in allograft vasculopathy and the early response to stent implantation.

Highlights

  • The artery wall consists of three layers: the intima, the media and the adventitia

  • It is believed that medial SMC proliferation and inward migration, as well as the transmigration and retention of blood borne inflammatory cells play key roles in transforming a benign NI into the obstructive lesions that are seen in atherosclerotic coronary artery disease (CAD), as well as allograft coronary disease (ACD) that occurs after heart transplantation[2,3]

  • The goals of the current study are to address the following questions using a rabbit model of allograft vasculopathy and the response to stent implantation: i) what is the origin of NI cells in allografts with or without stents? ii) to what degree do recipient cells contribute to the NI formation? and iii) what is the identity of the NI cells that populate the allograft NI?

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Summary

Introduction

The artery wall consists of three layers: the (inner) intima, the media and the (outer) adventitia. Non-diseased human coronary arteries normally have a modest layer of intimal thickening (or neointima, NI) that consists of an accumulation of smooth muscle cells (SMCs) and extracellular matrix[1]. It is believed that medial SMC proliferation and inward migration, as well as the transmigration and retention of blood borne inflammatory cells play key roles in transforming a benign NI into the obstructive lesions that are seen in atherosclerotic coronary artery disease (CAD), as well as allograft coronary disease (ACD) that occurs after heart transplantation[2,3]. The histopathology of ACD is characterized by inflammatory cell infiltrates with SMC accumulation and is more akin to ISR than the complex atherosclerotic lesions. Jonas and colleagues recently demonstrated that angiographic progression of ACD and ISR lesions in allograft coronary arteries correlate and share histological features[3]

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