Abstract
Atherosclerosis may be triggered by an elevated net transport of lipid-carrying macromolecules from plasma into the arterial wall. We hypothesised that whether lesions are of the thin-cap fibroatheroma (TCFA) type or are less fatty and more fibrous depends on the degree of elevation of transport, with greater uptake leading to the former. We further hypothesised that the degree of elevation can depend on haemodynamic wall shear stress characteristics and nitric oxide synthesis. Placing a tapered cuff around the carotid artery of apolipoprotein E -/- mice modifies patterns of shear stress and eNOS expression, and triggers lesion development at the upstream and downstream cuff margins; upstream but not downstream lesions resemble the TCFA. We measured wall uptake of a macromolecular tracer in the carotid artery of C57bl/6 mice after cuff placement. Uptake was elevated in the regions that develop lesions in hyperlipidaemic mice and was significantly more elevated where plaques of the TCFA type develop. Computational simulations and effects of reversing the cuff orientation indicated a role for solid as well as fluid mechanical stresses. Inhibiting NO synthesis abolished the difference in uptake between the upstream and downstream sites. The data support the hypothesis that excessively elevated wall uptake of plasma macromolecules initiates the development of the TCFA, suggest that such uptake can result from solid and fluid mechanical stresses, and are consistent with a role for NO synthesis. Modification of wall transport properties might form the basis of novel methods for reducing plaque rupture.
Highlights
The major cause of sudden death is coronary artery plaque rupture leading to thrombosis [1]
Placing a tapered, flowrestricting cuff around the carotid artery of apolipoprotein E -/- mice induces the formation of plaques upstream and downstream of the cuff; those upstream of the cuff are rich in lipid and have a histological resemblance to the thin-cap fibroatheroma (TCFA), whereas those downstream of the cuff contain less lipid and resemble stable lesions [7]
These findings provide a model for investigating the TCFA, imply that haemodynamic stresses are important in its pathogenesis, and are consistent with a key role for the NO signalling pathway
Summary
The major cause of sudden death is coronary artery plaque rupture leading to thrombosis [1]. Biomechanical studies [3] and wellestablished effects of lipids on inflammatory and proteolytic processes [4, 5] are consistent with the large, lipid-rich core of this lesion playing a key role in its rupture. The cuff leads to a non-uniform expression of endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) [8]. These findings provide a model for investigating the TCFA, imply that haemodynamic stresses are important in its pathogenesis, and are consistent with a key role for the NO signalling pathway
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