Abstract

Inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) is expressed by leukocytes and smooth muscle cells in atherosclerotic lesions. To test whether NO produced by iNOS deficiency affects atherosclerosis, we studied apoE/iNOS-double knockout (dKO) and apoE-knockout (KO) control animals fed a "Western-type" diet. After 16 weeks of Western-type diet, the aortic lesion area in apoE/iNOS-dKO males and females was significantly reduced, by 22% and 21%, respectively, compared with apoE-KO males and females. This effect was more pronounced after 24 weeks of Western-type diet, after which lesion formation in male and female dKO mice was reduced by 38% and 40%, respectively. Plasma levels of lipoperoxides in apoE/iNOS-dKO mice (2.0+/-0.23 micromol/L) were significantly lower than in apoE-KO control animals (3.2+/-0.44 micromol/L; P=0.02). To test whether substrate deficiency plays a role in the proatherogenic actions of iNOS, we administered L-arginine to apoE-KO animals for 16 and 24 weeks. L-Arginine treatment did not affect lesion formation in apoE-KO animals fed a Western-type diet. Genetic deficiency of iNOS decreases diet-induced atherosclerosis and lowers plasma levels of lipoperoxides, a marker for oxidative stress, in apoE-KO animals. Reduction in iNOS-mediated oxidative stress could partly explain protection from lesion formation in dKO animals. L-Arginine supplementation did not change lesion area in apoE-KO mice, indicating that substrate deficiency is not a likely cause for iNOS-mediated injury in this model of atherosclerosis.

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