Abstract

Chronic inflammation and degradation of elastin are the main processes in the development of abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA). Recent studies show that zinc has an anti-inflammatory effect. Based on these, zinc may render effective therapy for the treatment of the AAA. Currently, we want to investigate the effects of zinc on AAA progression and its related molecular mechanism. Rat AAA models were induced by periaortic application of CaCl2. AAA rats were treated by daily intraperitoneal injection of ZnSO4 or vehicle alone. The aorta segments were collected at 4 weeks after surgery. The primary rat aortic vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) were stimulated with TNF-α alone or with ZnSO4 for 3 weeks. The results showed that zinc supplementation significantly suppressed the CaCl2-induced expansion of the abdominal aortic diameter, as well as a preservation of medial elastin fibers in the aortas. Zinc supplementation also obviously attenuated infiltration of the macrophages and lymphocytes in the aortas. In addition, zinc reduced MMP-2 and MMP-9 production in the aortas. Most importantly, zinc treatment significantly induced A20 expression, along with inhibition of the NF-κB canonical signaling pathway in vitro in VSMCs and in vivo in rat AAA. This study demonstrated, for the first time, that zinc supplementation could prevent the development of rat experimental AAA by induction of A20-mediated inhibition of the NF-κB canonical signaling pathway.

Highlights

  • Abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) is a kind of serious vascular disease with high incidence and high mortality

  • Our results demonstrated that zinc supplementation significantly suppressed the abdominal aorta expansion, preserved elastin fibers and prevented the development of experimental AAA

  • We found that zinc induced A20 expression and inhibited the canonical nuclear factor κB (NF-κB) signaling pathway in vitro in vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) and in vivo in AAA

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Summary

Introduction

Abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) is a kind of serious vascular disease with high incidence and high mortality. With the change of the lifestyle and an aging population, the incidence is a rising trend [1]. Its typical pathological changes include chronic inflammatory cells infiltration, aortic elastin proteolytic degradation and pathological remodeling. These changes result in the destruction of elastic lamellar structure in the aortic media and gradual aneurysmal dilatation and even rupture [2]. Inflammation plays significant role in the progression of AAA [3,4], which may be the potential treatment target for AAA. Recent studies have shown that zinc finger protein A20 could prevent inflammatory response in aortic allografts and development of transplant

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