Abstract

To evaluate the effect of hypercholesterolemia on apoptosis and proliferation after vascular injury, iliac arteries of hypercholesterolemic (HC) and normocholesterolemic (NC) rabbits were examined after balloon injury using TUNEL, immunohistochemical staining of PCNA, macrophages, smooth muscle actin and p53. In media, apoptosis occurred massively early after injury and then decreased. HC did not affect this early post-injury apoptosis but significantly increased apoptosis 14 days later (D14). Immediate apoptosis in media was followed by active proliferation. HC sustained a high activity of proliferation until D14. The changes of immunoreactivity to p53 over the same 14 day period parallel that of apoptosis. In intima, where cells were scarce initially, proliferative activity reached a peak at D7 and then decreased. HC significantly enhanced proliferation at D14. In intima proliferation was accompanied by a later low-level apoptosis. HC significantly enhanced this low-level apoptosis at D14. These effects of HC resulted in significantly increased areas of intima and media. The fundamental difference between HC and NC was the infiltration of macrophages in HC. In conclusion, balloon injury induces early massive p53-associated apoptosis followed by proliferation in media, whereas in intima, it induces active proliferation followed by a low-level apoptosis. Hypercholesterolemia does not affect the early post-injury apoptosis but enhances proliferation and low-level apoptosis at a later stage, which in turn results in intimal and medial hyperplasia.

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