| Literature DB >> 28969682 |
Adam Zmysłowski1, Arkadiusz Szterk2.
Abstract
Due to the fact that one of the main causes of worldwide deaths are directly related to atherosclerosis, scientists are constantly looking for atherosclerotic factors, in an attempt to reduce prevalence of this disease. The most important known pro-atherosclerotic factors include: elevated levels of LDL, low HDL levels, obesity and overweight, diabetes, family history of coronary heart disease and cigarette smoking. Since finding oxidized forms of cholesterol - oxysterols - in lesion in the arteries, it has also been presumed they possess pro-atherosclerotic properties. The formation of oxysterols in the atherosclerosis lesions, as a result of LDL oxidation due to the inflammatory response of cells to mechanical stress, is confirmed. However, it is still unknown, what exactly oxysterols cause in connection with atherosclerosis, after gaining entry to the human body e.g., with food containing high amounts of cholesterol, after being heated. The in vivo studies should provide data to finally prove or disprove the thesis regarding the pro-atherosclerotic prosperities of oxysterols, yet despite dozens of available in vivo research some studies confirm such properties, other disprove them. In this article we present the current knowledge about the mechanism of formation of atherosclerotic lesions and we summarize available data on in vivo studies, which investigated whether oxysterols have properties to cause the formation and accelerate the progress of the disease. Additionally we will try to discuss why such different results were obtained in all in vivo studies.Entities:
Keywords: Atherosclerosis; Cholesterol; Cholesterol oxidation; LDL; Oxysterols
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28969682 PMCID: PMC5625595 DOI: 10.1186/s12944-017-0579-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lipids Health Dis ISSN: 1476-511X Impact factor: 3.876
Fig. 1Laminar flow disturbances. Once formed, lesion, leads to maintaining flow disturbances and activation of NF-κB in subsequent cells
Fig. 2Possible transformation of a LDL particle due to a reaction with highly reactive oxygen species
Fig. 3Main modification of cholesterol due to the oxidation occurring in different sites of the molecule [74, 75]
Summary of studies, which examined oxysterols atherosclerotic properties
| .Ref | Animal system | Diet/administration | Oxysterols | Results | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studies suggesting pro-atherosclerotic properties of oxysterols | |||||
| Jacobson et al., (1985) [ | Juvenile White Carneau pigeons | 3 months | Aortic accumulation of calcium in the cholesterol + triol group was 1.16 + 0.35 mg/g, whereas in the cholesterol-fed group it was 0.82 + 0.27 mg/g, an increase of 42% ( | No data about the triolCh standard, how it was prepared or what its purity was. | |
| Mahfouz et al., (1997) [ | New Zealand white male rabbits | 11 weeks | The stained sections of the aorta specimen from the rabbits fed with the control diet revealed a normal intima. The stained section of the aorta from the rabbits fed with OC revealed intimal thickening (atherosclerosis). The stained section of the aorta from the rabbits fed with PC showed less intimal thickening than in rabbits fed with OC. | Oxysterol used in study was from US Pharmacopeia cholesterol exposed to air at room temperature for >15 y. | |
| 1. an unmodified nonpurified diet (control diet); | |||||
| 2. the control diet plus 0.5% cholesterol | |||||
| 3. the control diet plus 0.5% cholesterol, which was characterized by a high concentration of cholesterol oxides; | 7-kCh (44,4%), 7α-hCh (1,8%), 7β-hCh (6,3%), β-epoxCh (1,7%), 26-hCh (19,9%), triolCh (25,7%) | ||||
| Staprans et al., (1998) [ | New Zealand white rabbit | 12 weeks | Serum cholesterol levels increased to a similar extent in both groups, with the majority of cholesterol in the b-VLDL fraction. Moreover, in the serum b-VLDL fraction and liver, there was a significant increase in the oxidized cholesterol levels. | The oxysterols generated by heating cholesterol at 100 °C for 8 h. | |
| 1. 150 g rabbit chow per day with 0,33% cholesterol was added | |||||
| 2. 150 g rabbit chow per day with 0,33% cholesterol was added, 5% of total cholesterol was oxidized | Oxysterols (52%): unknowns (48%) | ||||
| Oxysterols: | |||||
| 7-kCh (42%), 7α-hCh (7%), 7β-hCh (20%), α-epoxCh (12%), β-epoxCh (16%), 25-hCh (3%) | |||||
| Meynier et al., (2002) [ | Male Golden Syrian hamsters of Charles River’s breeding | 3 months | Based on electron microscopy morphology of coronary arteries indicated the development of atherosclerosis in hamster on hyperlipidemia diet with oxysterols | The oxysterols generated by heating cholesterol at 135 °C dissolved in a lipid matrix (lard) under O2–CO2 (95:5, | |
| 1. diet containing 25 g corn oil–fish oil (4:1, w/w)/kg (normolipidaemic diet); | |||||
| 2. normolipidaemic diet supplemented with 150 g lard, 30 g cholesterol/kg (hyperlipidaemic diet); | |||||
| 3. hyperlipidaemic diet, in which 4 g cholesterol/kg was replaced by a mixture of oxysterols | 7-kCh (23,5%), 7α-hCh (6,7%), 7β-hCh (18,5%), α-epoxCh (21,1%), β-epoxCh (17,6%), 7-hpCh (3,0%), unknowns (9,6%) | ||||
| Staprans et al., (2000) [ | LDLR−/− and apoE−/− mouse strains with a C57BL/6 J background | 28 and 16 weeks | Results demonstrate that oxidized cholesterol in the diet increases fatty streak lesions in aortas of both LDLR−/− and apoE−/− mice. In LDLR−/− mice fed diets that contained oxidized cholesterol, fatty streak lesions increased from 15.93% to 21.00% (32% increase). In apoE−/− mice, the lesion area increased from 15.01% to 20.70% (38% increase) | The oxysterols generated by heating cholesterol at 100 °C for 16 h. | |
| 1. control diet – regular mouse chow supplemented with 1.0% cholesterol | |||||
| 2. control diet except that 5% to 10% of the added cholesterol consisted of cholesterol oxidation products (ie, the diet contained 1% cholesterol and 0.05% to 0.10% oxidized cholesterol). | Oxysterols: unknowns about 1:1 | ||||
| 7-kCh (40–45%), 7α-hCh (7–10%), 7β-hCh (15–20%), α-epoxCh (10–15%), β-epoxCh (15–20%), 25-hCh (traces) | |||||
| Plat et al., (2014) [ | LDLE+/− mice, female | 35 weeks | Serum levels of cholesterol, lipoprotein profiles, cholesterol exposure and inflammatory markers at the end of the experiment were comparable between diet groups. | The oxysterols generated by heating cholesterol at 180 °C for 3 h | |
| 1. high-fat diet | |||||
| 2. diet with replaced 10% of cholesterol by oxysterols (0,025 g/100 g diet) 0,03 mg oxysterol/g body weight per day | 7-kCh (40,3%), 7α-hCh (4,0%), 7β-hCh (13,8%), α-epoxCh (30,3%), β-epoxCh (5,4%), unknowns (6,1%) | ||||
| Umetani et al., (2014) [ | males and females | 12 months | 27-hCh was administrated by subcutaneous injection every 2 days (20 mg/kg body weight) | Size and abundance of lesions were larger in apoE−/− and apoE−/−cyp7b1−/− than in wild type and cyp7b1−/−, in both males and females. | The 27-hCh was dissolved in 30% (2-hydroxypropyl)-β-cyclodextrin solution, and the same solution served as the control treatment. |
| Studies diminishing pro-atherosclerotic properties of oxysterols | |||||
| Higley et al., (1986) [ | female rabbits (New Zealand White) | 11 weeks | Total number of lesions was equivalent to the cholesterol, oxysterols and cholesterol-oxysterols mixture diet groups, the oxysterols and cholesterol-oxysterols diets did not induce the statistically significant degree of severity of the lesions produced by the cholesterol diet. | The oxysterols generated by heating cholesterol at 110 °C for 64 h. The oxidized cholesterol was purified by chromatography, yet some unknowns are present. | |
| 1. Control diet - 2% corn oil | |||||
| 2. Diet with 166 mg/kg/day cholesterol | |||||
| 3. Diet with 166 mg/kg/day oxysterols | 7-kCh (26,0%), 7α-hCh (4,5%), 7β-hCh (5,3%), α-epoxCh (24,0%), β-epoxCh (17,0%), 25-hCh (2,0%) 7-hpCh (18,2%) unknowns (2,9%) | ||||
| 4. Diet with 166 mg/kg/day cholesterol and oxysterols mixture | Chol (35%), 7-kCh (8,0%), α-epoxCh (17,0%), 25-hCh (2,0%), 7-hpCh (10,0%) unknowns (20,0%) | ||||
| Vine et al., (1998) [ | Semi-Lop rabbits | 2 weeks | Total plasma oxysterols were significantly elevated in both cholesterol supplemented groups. | The oxysterols generated by heating cholesterol at 135 °C for 4 h | |
| 1. standard rabbit chow | |||||
| 2. rabbit chow supplemented with 1,0% cholesterol | |||||
| 3. rabbit chow supplemented with 1,0% cholesterol auto-oxidized (containing 6,0% oxysterols) | 7-kCh (41,8 ± 5,1%) 7β-hCh (17,8 ± 2.2%), α-epoxCh (3,8 ± 0,5%), β-epoxCh (3,8 ± 0,5%), cholest-4-ene-3-one (7,2 ± 1,2%), 25-hCh (4,1 + 0,5%), unknowns (21,3 ± 3,5%) | ||||
| Ando et al., (2002) [ | apoE−/− mice | 8 weeks | There was no significant difference in the lesion volume in the aortic valve and the content of cholesterol in the aorta among the mice fed the control, cholesterol and oxysterol diets | The oxysterols generated by heating cholesterol at 150 °C for 12 h. | |
| 1. control diet | |||||
| 2. control diet containing 0·2 g cholesterol/kg (cholesterol diet) | |||||
| 3. control diet containing 0·2 g oxysterols/kg (oxysterol diet). | 7-kCh (22,1%), 7α-hCh (5,6%), 7β-hCh (15,2%), α-epoxCh (16,2%), β-epoxCh (15,6%), 25-hCh (2,7%), triolCh (1,3%) unknowns (20,5%) | ||||
| Weingärtner et al., (2015) [ | male apoE−/− mice | 4 weeks | 7β-hCh was delivered daily by i.p. application | Early atherosclerotic lesion formation was similar between controls (17.2 ± 8.5), i.p. application of cholesterol (14.5 ± 9.1%) and 7β-hCh (7.9 ± 4.5%) | No data found about concentration of cholesterol and 7β-hCh delivered to animals. |
| diet - Western type (40 kcal% butterfat, 0,15% w/w cholesterol) | |||||
Fig. 4Example of non-typical cholesterol modification due to the peroxidation of the side chain, which causes the formation of volatile compounds and a cholesterol derivative, which could possibly undergo another oxidation