Marie-Anne Mawhin1,2,3,4,5, Peggy Tilly2,3,4,5, Gaia Zirka1, Anne-Laure Charles6, Farid Slimani2,3,4,5, Jean-Luc Vonesch7, Jean-Baptiste Michel1, Magnus Bäck8,9, Xavier Norel1, Jean-Etienne Fabre1. 1. UMR 1148 INSERM, Xavier Bichat Hospital, 46 rue Henri Huchard, Paris, France. 2. IGMBC, Illkirch, France. 3. UMR 7104 CNRS, Illkirch, France. 4. U964 INSERM, Illkirch, France. 5. Strasbourg University, Strasbourg, France. 6. Equipe d'accueil 3072, Faculty of Medicine, Translational Medicine Federation, Strasbourg University, Strasbourg, France. 7. Imaging Centre, IGBMC, Illkirch, France. 8. Department of Medicine, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden. 9. INSERM U1116, University of Lorraine and CHRU, Nancy, France.
Abstract
Aims: Both leukotrienes and neutrophils have been linked to plaque destabilization. Despite being evoked, the role of leukotriene B4 (LTB4) in neutrophil recruitment to plaques and the concomitant effects of these two actors on plaque stability remain to be proven. Since both actors are elicited during endotoxaemia, a condition associated with the risk of cardiovascular events, we investigated whether endotoxaemia promotes LTB4-mediated neutrophil infiltration in plaques and explored the roles of LTB4 and neutrophils in plaque destabilization. Methods and results: Endotoxaemia induced by repeated peritoneal endotoxin injections at a non-lethal dose (1.5 mg/kg, 5 days) in chow-fed aged Apoe-/- mice (over 45 weeks old) resulted in neutrophil infiltration and activation in plaques. Subsequently to neutrophil invasion, plaques exhibited increased features of vulnerability: reduced collagen content, expanded necrotic cores, and thinned fibrous caps. These plaque features were reproduced by direct deposition of isolated neutrophils onto murine atheromatous carotid arteries in an in vivo assay. In endotoxemic mice, plaques produced increased amounts of LTB4. Genomic or pharmacological impairments of this production reduced neutrophil infiltration, collagenolysis, and apoptosis of smooth muscle cells in plaques of endotoxemic mice. Furthermore, conditioned media of human culprit plaques (CPs) contained more LTB4 than non-CPs and levels of LTB4 correlated to both neutrophil activation markers and endotoxin releases in CPs. Conclusion: These results show that the increased neutrophil recruitment elicited by LTB4 contributes to increase features of plaque destabilization in endotoxemic contexts and point out LTB4 as a potential therapeutic target in atherosclerosis.
Aims: Both leukotrienes and neutrophils have been linked to plaque destabilization. Despite being evoked, the role of leukotriene B4 (LTB4) in neutrophil recruitment to plaques and the concomitant effects of these two actors on plaque stability remain to be proven. Since both actors are elicited during endotoxaemia, a condition associated with the risk of cardiovascular events, we investigated whether endotoxaemia promotes LTB4-mediated neutrophil infiltration in plaques and explored the roles of LTB4 and neutrophils in plaque destabilization. Methods and results: Endotoxaemia induced by repeated peritoneal endotoxin injections at a non-lethal dose (1.5 mg/kg, 5 days) in chow-fed aged Apoe-/- mice (over 45 weeks old) resulted in neutrophil infiltration and activation in plaques. Subsequently to neutrophil invasion, plaques exhibited increased features of vulnerability: reduced collagen content, expanded necrotic cores, and thinned fibrous caps. These plaque features were reproduced by direct deposition of isolated neutrophils onto murineatheromatous carotid arteries in an in vivo assay. In endotoxemic mice, plaques produced increased amounts of LTB4. Genomic or pharmacological impairments of this production reduced neutrophil infiltration, collagenolysis, and apoptosis of smooth muscle cells in plaques of endotoxemic mice. Furthermore, conditioned media of human culprit plaques (CPs) contained more LTB4 than non-CPs and levels of LTB4 correlated to both neutrophil activation markers and endotoxin releases in CPs. Conclusion: These results show that the increased neutrophil recruitment elicited by LTB4 contributes to increase features of plaque destabilization in endotoxemic contexts and point out LTB4 as a potential therapeutic target in atherosclerosis.
Authors: Charlotte D C C van der Heijden; Rob Ter Horst; Inge C L van den Munckhof; Kiki Schraa; Jacqueline de Graaf; Leo A B Joosten; A H Jan Danser; Mihai G Netea; Jaap Deinum; Joost Rutten; Niels P Riksen Journal: J Clin Endocrinol Metab Date: 2020-08-01 Impact factor: 5.958
Authors: Julia Hinterdobler; Heribert Schunkert; Thorsten Kessler; Hendrik B Sager Journal: Antioxid Redox Signal Date: 2021-09-14 Impact factor: 8.401