| Literature DB >> 26005197 |
Dipak P Ramji1, Thomas S Davies2.
Abstract
Atherosclerosis, a chronic inflammatory disorder of the arteries, is responsible for most deaths in westernized societies with numbers increasing at a marked rate in developing countries. The disease is initiated by the activation of the endothelium by various risk factors leading to chemokine-mediated recruitment of immune cells. The uptake of modified lipoproteins by macrophages along with defective cholesterol efflux gives rise to foam cells associated with the fatty streak in the early phase of the disease. As the disease progresses, complex fibrotic plaques are produced as a result of lysis of foam cells, migration and proliferation of vascular smooth muscle cells and continued inflammatory response. Such plaques are stabilized by the extracellular matrix produced by smooth muscle cells and destabilized by matrix metalloproteinase from macrophages. Rupture of unstable plaques and subsequent thrombosis leads to clinical complications such as myocardial infarction. Cytokines are involved in all stages of atherosclerosis and have a profound influence on the pathogenesis of this disease. This review will describe our current understanding of the roles of different cytokines in atherosclerosis together with therapeutic approaches aimed at manipulating their actions.Entities:
Keywords: Atherosclerosis; Chemokines; Cytokines; Inflammation; Therapeutic avenues
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26005197 PMCID: PMC4671520 DOI: 10.1016/j.cytogfr.2015.04.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cytokine Growth Factor Rev ISSN: 1359-6101 Impact factor: 7.638
Fig. 1Pathogenesis of atherosclerosis. The disease is initiated by the activation of the endothelium/endothelial cell (EC) dysfunction by accumulation of LDL, which subsequently gets modified (e.g. oxidized), together with other atherogenic factors. The activated ECs secrete a range of chemokines and increase the expression of adhesion proteins on their cell surface. This results in the recruitment and infiltration of immune cells such as monocytes. The monocytes differentiate into macrophages, which is accompanied by increased expression of pattern recognition receptors on their surface, which participate in the promotion of inflammation and uptake of modified LDL, leading to the formation of lipid laden foam cells. Continued accumulation of modified LDL together with disturbed cellular lipid homeostasis causes apoptosis/necrosis of foam cells resulting in lipid deposition (necrotic core) and amplification of the inflammatory response. Smooth muscle cells (SMCs) migrate from the media to the intima where they proliferate, uptake modified lipoproteins and secrete extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins that stabilizes the plaques (fibrous cap). Continued inflammation orchestrated by cytokines destabilizes such plaques via decreased production of ECM proteins (reduced synthesis together with apoptosis/necrosis of SMCs/SMC-derived foam cells), increased production/activities of ECM degrading matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) and reduced expression/activities of inhibitors of these enzymes. Plaque rupture leads to platelet aggregation, coagulation and thrombus formation that ultimately results in the clinical complications associated with this disease. Cytokines affect all the different stages in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis (see text for details). Abbreviations: ECM, extracellular matrix; LDL, low-density lipoprotein; MMP, matrix metalloproteinase; SMC, Smooth muscle cells; TIMP, tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase.
The roles of key chemokines in atherosclerosis.
| Chemokine | Summary of studies using mouse model systems | Ref. |
|---|---|---|
| CCL2 | Hematopoietic overexpression in ApoE−/− model accelerates atherosclerosis without affecting lipoprotein profile. Inhibition by transfection of an N-terminal deletion mutant in skeletal muscle of ApoE−/− mice limits progression and destabilization of established plaques and normalizes levels of pro-inflammatory mediators. Deficiency reduces atherosclerosis in ApoE−/− or LDLr−/− models. Local gene silencing using adenoviral vectors promotes plaque stabilization in the ApoE−/−. | |
| CCL3 | BMT in the LDLr−/− model system shows that deficiency of CCL3 reduces atherosclerotic burden and decreases accumulation of neutrophils. | |
| CCL5 | Knockdown of Y-box binding protein-1, which controls CCL5 expression, reduces neointima formation following carotid ligation in the ApoE−/− model. | |
| CXCL5 | Inhibition in the ApoE−/− model leads to macrophage foam cell accumulation in atherosclerotic plaques. The chemokine modulates macrophage activation and stimulates cholesterol efflux together with associated changes in gene expression. | |
| CXCL1 | Blocking antibodies increases neointimal formation and inhibits endothelial recovery after carotid injury in ApoE−/− model. | |
| CXCL10 | Deficiency in the ApoE−/− model reduces atherosclerosis by modulating the local balance of effector and regulatory T cells with increased levels of TGF-β and IL-10. Inhibition using neutralizing antibodies in the ApoE−/− produces a stable plaque phenotype. | |
| CXCL16 | Deficiency in the LDLr−/− model exacerbates lesion formation. Overexpression promotes a vulnerable plaque phenotype in the ApoE−/− model. | |
| CX3CL1 | Deficiency in the ApoE−/− or LDLr−/− models reduces atherosclerosis in the brachiocephalic artery but not in the aortic root. | |
| CCL17 | Deficiency in the ApoE−/− model reduces atherosclerosis that is dependent on Tregs. Expression of CCL17 by DCs limits expansion of Tregs and enhances atherosclerosis. CCL17 blocking antibody expands Tregs and reduces atherosclerosis. | |
| CCL19/CCL21 | Transplantation of bone marrow from mice lacking both these chemokines in the LDLr−/− model increases inflammatory cellular infiltration but decreases expression of several pro-inflammatory cytokines. Plaque stability is increased but lesion development remains unchanged. | |
| CXCL12 | Administration in the ApoE−/− model promotes a more stable plaque phenotype and enhances the accumulation of smooth muscle progenitor cells without promoting atherosclerosis. | |
| CXCL4 | Elimination from platelets reduces atherosclerosis in C57BL/6 and ApoE−/− mice. | |
| MIF | Deficiency in the LDLr−/− model reduces atherosclerosis associated with impaired monocyte adhesion to the arterial wall. Blockade in mice with advanced atherosclerosis leads to plaque regression and reduces monocyte and T-cell content in plaques. Blockade in the LDLr−/− model following experimental angioplasty decreases vascular inflammation, cellular proliferation and neointimal thickening. Inhibition in the ApoE−/− model reduces aortic inflammation and, following vascular injury, shifts the cellular composition of neointimal plaques to a stable phenotype with reduced inflammatory cells and increased SMC content. |
The roles of key chemokine receptors in atherosclerosis.
| Receptor | Summary of studies using mouse model systems | Ref. |
|---|---|---|
| CCR1 | Deficiency in the ApoE−/− model increases plaque area, T-cell content and levels of IFN-γ but doesn’t protect against neointima formation following wire injury. | |
| CCR2 | Deficiency in the ApoE−/− model reduces lesion formation. Transplantation of CCR2 deficient bone marrow in the ApoE−/− model suppresses angiotensin II-mediated acceleration of atherosclerosis and abdominal aortic aneurysm, and in the ApoE3-Leiden model reduces overall atherosclerotic lesion development but has no effect on the progression of established plaques. Pharmacological inhibition reduces macrophage infiltration in the ApoE−/− model expressing human CCR2. Monocyte-targeted RNA interference in the ApoE−/− model reduces recruitment of Ly-6Chigh monocytes, attenuates inflammation and improves infarct healing. | |
| CCR5 | Deficiency in the ApoE−/− model protects against atherosclerosis and is associated with a more stable plaque phenotype, reduced infiltration of monocytes and decreased Th1 inflammatory response, and increased production of IL-10. An important role in late-stage atherosclerosis was also identified involving modulation of macrophage accumulation in the plaque and reduction in circulating levels of IL-6 and MCP-5. Antagonist attenuates atherosclerosis and reduces myocardial reperfusion injury in mouse models. Transplantation of CCR5 deficient bone marrow in the LDLr−/− model attenuates atherosclerosis with increased IL-10 expression and reduced TNF-α levels. | |
| CCR6 | Deficiency in the LDLr−/− model reduces atherosclerotic burden by affecting monocyte-mediated inflammation. Reduced atherosclerosis also seen in the ApoE−/− model accompanied by decrease in both circulating levels of monocytes and their migration. BMT reveals importance of chemokine expressed by hematopoietic cells. | |
| CCR7 | Expression induced in an atherosclerosis regression model in ApoE−/− mice. Abrogation of function using antibodies against ligands CCL19 and CCL21 preserved lesion size and foam cell content in this model. Deficiency in the LDLr−/− model attenuates atherosclerosis by modulating T-cell entry and exit into lesions. In contrast, deficiency in the ApoE−/− model exacerbates the disease by increasing T-cell accumulation. BMT confirms the importance of CCR7 expressed by hematopoietic cells. | |
| CXCR2 | Transplantation of CXCR2 deficient bone marrow in the LDLr−/− model reduces macrophage content in established plaques. | |
| CXCR3 | Blockade in the LDLr−/− model using the antagonist NBI-74330 inhibits atherosclerosis by reducing activated T-cells and increasing Tregs. Deficiency in the ApoE−/− model reduces early atherosclerotic lesion development in the abdominal aorta associated with upregulation of IL-10, IL-18BP, eNOS and Tregs. | |
| CXCR4 | Functional blockade in the ApoE−/− or the LDLr−/− models promotes atherosclerosis through deranged neutrophil homeostasis. Antagonists reduce neointima formation without impairing endotheliazation following carotid wire injury in the ApoE−/− model. Deficiency of endothelial CXCR4 attenuates reendothelialization and stimulates neointima hyperplasia following vascular injury in ApoE−/− mice. | |
| CXCR6 | Deficiency in the ApoE−/− model decreases plaque formation and reduces T-cell and macrophage content. | |
| CXCR7 | Activation in the ApoE−/− model improves hyperlipidemia by stimulating cholesterol uptake in adipose tissue. | |
| CX3CR1 | Deficiency in the ApoE−/− model decreases atherosclerosis associated with reduced recruitment of macrophages and DCs. Antagonist inhibits atherosclerosis in both ApoE−/− and LDLr−/− models by modulating monocyte trafficking. |
The roles of interleukins in atherosclerosis.
| Interleukin | Summary of studies using mouse model systems | Ref. |
|---|---|---|
| IL-1α | BMT in the LDLR−/− model demonstrated that macrophage-derived IL-1α but not IL-1β drives atherosclerosis. BMT in the ApoE−/− model also demonstrated the importance of IL-1α. Fatty acid-induced uncoupling of mitochondrial respiration elicits inflammasome-independent IL-1α production that drives vascular inflammation in atherosclerosis. Active immunization targeting IL-1α decreases both the inflammatory reaction and plaque progression in the ApoE−/− model. | |
| IL-1β | Deficiency or blocking of the cytokine in the ApoE−/− model decreases atherosclerosis and expression of several pro-inflammatory genes. Deficiency of IL-1 receptor-1 in the ApoE−/− model reduces atherosclerosis but was surprisingly associated with many unexpected features of plaque stability. BMT in this model showed that selective loss of IL-1 in the vessel wall reduces plaque burden. | |
| IL-1RA | Overexpression in the LDLr−/− model reduces foam-cell lesion size by affecting plasma cholesterol levels. Overexpression in the ApoE−/− model attenuates fatty streak formation. The IL-1/IL-1RA ratio plays a crucial role in controlling vascular inflammation and atherosclerosis. Heterozygous deficiency in ApoE−/− mice enhances early atherosclerotic lesions with increased macrophage content and decreased level of SMCs. Deficiency in the C57BL/6J background promotes neointimal formation after wire injury. | |
| IL-2 | Injection of the cytokine enhances atherosclerosis in the ApoE−/− model whereas injection of anti-IL-2 antibodies reduces this. Cytokine therapy with IL-2/anti-IL-2 monoclonal antibody in this model attenuates atherosclerosis by expanding Tregs and modulating immune-inflammatory components. | |
| IL-3 | Transplantation of bone marrow from mice that are deficient in the common β subunit of the IL-3/GM-CSF receptor in the LDLr−/− model reduces stem cell expansion and monocytosis along with macrophage and collagen content. | |
| IL-4 | Early study showed that deficiency in the ApoE−/− model reduces atherosclerotic lesions. However, another in-depth study involving exogenous delivery and/or genetic deficiency in ApoE−/− or LDLr−/− models showed no involvement in atherosclerotic lesion formation irrespective of the mode of disease induction. | |
| IL-5 | Transplantation of IL-15-deficient bone marrow in the LDLr−/− model reduces levels of IgM that recognizes epitopes in oxidized LDL and accelerates atherosclerosis. | |
| IL-6 | Injection of the cytokine in the ApoE−/− mice increases levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines and lesion size and use of IL-6 lentivirus demonstrated the ability to destabilize plaques. Inhibition of IL-6 trans-signaling using the inhibitor, soluble glycoprotein 130, reduces atherosclerosis by decreasing endothelial cell activation, infiltration of SMCs and recruitment of monocytes. However, deficiency of the cytokine in both ApoE−/− and LDLr−/− models enhanced atherosclerosis. | |
| IL-10 | BMT in the LDLr−/− model showed deficiency of the cytokine accelerates atherosclerosis whereas its overexpression inhibits advanced lesions, decreases cholesterol and phospholipid oxidation products in the aorta along with monocytic activation and produces a shift to Th2 phenotype. Deficiency in the ApoE−/− model increases atherosclerosis associated with increased LDL levels, Th1 response, MMP and tissue factor activities, and markers of systemic coagulation and vascular thrombosis. Deficiency in the ApoE*3-Leiden mice leads to increased neointima surface following cuff-induced stenosis of the femoral artery. A marked inhibition of this along with reduction in plasma cholesterol levels and expression of several pro-inflammatory cytokines was produced by overexpression of IL-10. The cytokine also attenuates the response to wire carotid artery injury in wt mice. Gene therapy using IL-10 encoding viral vectors or plasmids in ApoE−/− or LDLr−/− models reduces atherosclerosis associated with decreased inflammation, oxidative stress, expression of pro-inflammatory markers and macrophage content of plaques. | |
| IL-12 | Blockade of function by vaccination in the LDLr−/− model reduces atherosclerosis with increased SMC and collagen content. Deficiency in the ApoE−/− model reduces lesion. Injection of the cytokine in the ApoE−/− model increases serum levels of anti-oxidized LDL antibodies and accelerates atherosclerosis. | |
| IL-13 | Administration of cytokine in LDLr−/− model promotes favorable plaque morphology by increasing lesional collagen content, decreasing VCAM-dependent monocyte recruitment and inducing M2 macrophage phenotype. Deficiency of the cytokine accelerates atherosclerosis. | |
| IL-15 | Neutralization of the cytokine in the LDLr−/− model using a DNA vaccination strategy reduces plaque size. Blockade of the cytokine increases intimal thickening following carotid artery injury in C57BL/6. | |
| IL-17 | Studies on loss of SOCS3 expression in T-cells of LDLr−/− model demonstrated protective role of the cytokine in atherosclerosis. Transplantation of IL-17 receptor deficient bone marrow in the LDLr−/− model attenuates atherosclerosis whereas deficiency of the cytokine in the ApoE−/− model has no effect on plaque burden but attenuates vascular and systemic inflammation. In contrast, inhibition using neutralizing antibody in the ApoE−/− model prevents atherosclerotic lesion progression by reducing inflammatory burden and cellular infiltration, and improving lesion stability. Similarly, deficiency of the cytokine or its receptor in the ApoE−/− model reduces atherosclerosis and vascular inflammation whereas injection of IL-17 promotes the disease. IL-17 exacerbates ferric chloride-induced arterial thrombosis in rat carotid artery. | |
| IL-18 | Deficiency in the ApoE−/− model reduces atherosclerosis associated with decreased action of IFN-γ, more stable plaque phenotype and shift to Th2 immune response though a pro-atherogenic role was identified in one study. Administration potentiates atherosclerosis associated with elevated levels of IFN-γ and reduced plaque stability. Lack of endogenous IFN-γ ablated the effects of IL-18 on atherosclerosis. | |
| IL-19 | Administration reduces atherosclerosis in the LDLr−/− model by promotiong Th2 polarization, decreasing leukocyte adhesion and suppressing pro-inflammatory gene expression. Also, reduces ligation-mediated neointimal hyperplasia by decreasing activation of SMCs. | |
| IL-20 | Administration in the ApoE−/− model promotes atherosclerosis. | |
| IL-25 | Administration in the ApoE−/− model reduces atherosclerosis via modulation of innate immune responses. | |
| IL-27 | Deficiency of the cytokine or its receptor in the LDLr−/− model along with BMT and | |
| IL-33 | Administration in the ApoE−/− model reduces atherosclerosis associated with decreased foam cell content and levels of IFN-γ, and increased levels of IL-4, -5 and -13. Cytokine produced a Th1 to Th2 shift and had higher levels of anti-OxLDL antibodies. Mice treated with a soluble decoy receptor that neutralizes IL-33 developed larger plaques. Action of IL-33 was mediated in a IL-5-dependent manner. |
The roles of other cytokines in atherosclerosis.
| Cytokine | Summary of studies using mouse model systems | Ref. |
|---|---|---|
| GDF-15 | Transplantation of GDF-15-deficient bone marrow in LDLr−/− model attenuates macrophage chemotaxis and accumulation, and produces a stable plaque phenotype. Deficiency in the ApoE−/− model inhibits atherosclerosis by decreasing apoptotic cells and IL-6-dependent inflammatory response to vascular injury. Transgenic overexpression in ApoE−/− model reveals a protective role. | |
| G-CSF | Administration in the ApoE−/− model reduces atherosclerosis (2 studies) associated with decreased serum cholesterol, increased circulating monocytes, and increased expression of IL-10 and Tregs. However, one study found increased atherosclerosis by G-CSF. | |
| GM-CSF | Deficiency in the LDLr−/− model showed that it promoted advanced plaque progression by increasing macrophage apoptosis susceptibility. However, another study found reduced atherosclerosis associated with decreased content of dendritic and T-cells and disruption of elastic fibers adjacent to the lesion. Injection of viral-encoding GM-CSF in the LDLr−/− model increases atherosclerosis associated with oxidative stress, inflammation and adhesion protein expression. Deficiency in the ApoE−/− model increases lesion size associated with accumulation of macrophages and reduction in collagen content. In contrast, administration in the ApoE−/− model exacerbates atherosclerosis. | |
| IFN-α | Administration accelerates atherosclerosis in the LDLr−/− model. | |
| IFN-β | Administration promotes atherosclerosis in ApoE−/− and LDLr−/− models. In contrast, the cytokine attenuated angiotensin II-accelerated atherosclerosis and vascular remodeling in ApoE−/− model. | |
| IFN-γ | Deficiency of receptor in ApoE−/− model reduces atherosclerosis lesion size and lipid accumulation, and increases collagen content. Deficiency of the cytokine attenuates atherosclerosis in ApoE−/− or LDLr−/− mice and BMT in this model reveals the importance of cytokine expressed by the hematopoietic compartment. Administration in the ApoE−/− model increases atherosclerosis associated with elevated levels of T-cells. Postnatal blocking of the function of the cytokine in the ApoE−/− model via overexpression of soluble decoy receptor prevents atherosclerotic plaque formation and stabilizes advanced plaques. | |
| M-CSF | Deficiency in the ApoE−/− or LDLr−/− models attenuates atherosclerosis. | |
| TGF-β | Gene therapy in LDLr−/− mice reduces atherosclerosis associated with decreased oxidative stress, inflammation and adhesion protein expression. Inhibition of TGF-β signaling in the ApoE−/− model accelerates atherosclerosis associated with increased inflammation and decreased collagen content. BMT reveals the importance of the cytokine expressed by the hematopoietic compartment. Overexpression in the ApoE−/− mice reduces atherosclerosis by decreasing T-cell and macrophage content and inflammatory cytokines, and increasing collagen levels. The protective effect of estradiol on fatty streak formation in the ApoE−/− model requires TGF-β. Disruption of TGF-β signaling in dendritic and T cells affects atherosclerosis though one study found no effect in relation to T cells. | |
| TNF-α | Deficiency of the cytokine in the ApoE−/− or APOE*3-Leiden models reduces atherosclerosis associated with decreased foam cells and expression of several pro-inflammatory markers. BMT reveals important role of cytokine expressed by the hematopoietic compartment. Transplantation of bone marrow deficient in p55 TNF receptor in the LDLr−/− model reduces atherosclerosis associated with decreased foam cells and expression of pro-inflammatory markers. | |
| TNFSF12/TWEAK | Genetic deficiency/inhibition in the ApoE−/− model reduces atherosclerosis associated with diminished pro-inflammatory response and enhanced plaque stability. | |
| TRAIL | Deficiency in the ApoE−/− model accelerates atherosclerosis, vascular calcification, diabetes and plaque instability. Systemic administration reduces atherosclerosis in this model. |