| Literature DB >> 29861387 |
Carla Winter1, Carlos Silvestre-Roig1, Almudena Ortega-Gomez1, Patricia Lemnitzer2, Hessel Poelman3, Ariane Schumski1, Janine Winter2, Maik Drechsler1, Renske de Jong2, Roland Immler4, Markus Sperandio5, Michael Hristov2, Tanja Zeller6, Gerry A F Nicolaes3, Christian Weber7, Joana R Viola1, Andres Hidalgo8, Christoph Scheiermann4, Oliver Soehnlein9.
Abstract
Onset of cardiovascular complications as a consequence of atherosclerosis exhibits a circadian incidence with a peak in the morning hours. Although development of atherosclerosis extends for long periods of time through arterial leukocyte recruitment, we hypothesized that discrete diurnal invasion of the arterial wall could sustain atherogenic growth. Here, we show that myeloid cell recruitment to atherosclerotic lesions oscillates with a peak during the transition from the activity to the resting phase. This diurnal phenotype is regulated by rhythmic release of myeloid cell-derived CCL2, and blockade of its signaling abolished oscillatory leukocyte adhesion. In contrast, we show that myeloid cell adhesion to microvascular beds peaks during the early activity phase. Consequently, timed pharmacological CCR2 neutralization during the activity phase caused inhibition of atherosclerosis without disturbing microvascular recruitment. These findings demonstrate that chronic inflammation of large vessels feeds on rhythmic myeloid cell recruitment, and lay the foundation for chrono-pharmacology-based therapy.Entities:
Keywords: adhesion; atherosclerosis; chemokine; chrono-pharmacology; circadian clock; monocyte; neutrophil
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29861387 DOI: 10.1016/j.cmet.2018.05.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Metab ISSN: 1550-4131 Impact factor: 27.287