| Literature DB >> 31089324 |
Francesco Moroni1, Enrico Ammirati2, Giuseppe Danilo Norata3,4, Marco Magnoni1, Paolo G Camici1.
Abstract
Atherosclerosis is one of the leading causes of death and disability worldwide. It is a complex disease characterized by lipid accumulation within the arterial wall, inflammation, local neoangiogenesis, and apoptosis. Innate immune effectors, in particular monocytes and macrophages, play a pivotal role in atherosclerosis initiation and progression. Although most of available evidence on the role of monocytes and macrophages in atherosclerosis is derived from animal studies, a growing body of evidence elucidating the role of these mononuclear cell subtypes in human atherosclerosis is currently accumulating. A novel pathogenic role of monocytes and macrophages in terms of atherosclerosis initiation and progression, in particular concerning the role of these cell subsets in neovascularization, has been discovered. The aim of the present article is to review currently available evidence on the role of monocytes and macrophages in human atherosclerosis and in relation to plaque characteristics, such as plaque neoangiogenesis, and patients' prognosis and their potential role as biomarkers.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31089324 PMCID: PMC6476044 DOI: 10.1155/2019/7434376
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mediators Inflamm ISSN: 0962-9351 Impact factor: 4.711
Summary of currently available studies on human circulating monocytes subsets and atherosclerosis.
| Authors | Year | Sample size | Monocyte subpopulation of interest | Main result | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jaipersad et al. | 2014 | 160 individuals with carotid artery stenosis | CCR2-expressing monocytes, subdivided into classical, intermediate, and nonclassical subsets | Classical CD14hiCD16−CCR2+ monocytes are associated with the degree of carotid stenosis and plaque neovascularization evidenced by CEUS | [ |
| Ammirati et al. | 2016 | 64 individuals with intermediate carotid artery stenosis | CD14+ monocytes subdivided into classical, intermediate, and nonclassical subsets | Total CD14+ monocytes and nonclassical CD14hiCD16− monocytes are reduced in subjects with higher CEUS-evidenced neovascularization | [ |
| Ammirati et al. | 2018 | 9 individuals with intermediate carotid artery stenosis | CD14+ monocytes subdivided into classical, intermediate, and nonclassical subsets | People with a stronger uptake of activated macrophage-specific radiotracer PK11195 had reduced circulating total CD14+ monocytes and nonclassical CD14hiCD16− monocytes | [ |
| Justo-Junior et al. | 2018 | 18 controls, 34 individuals with CVRF, 32 patients with stable angina, and 16 patients with unstable angina | Classical, intermediate, and nonclassical circulating monocytes | Intermediate CD14hiCD16+ monocytes were elevated in unstable angina patients. They also displayed high expression of PRRs | [ |
| Yamamoto et al. | 2016 | 389 CAD patients | Peripheral blood monocytes | A high monocyte count predicted future cardiovascular events in CAD patients | [ |
| Zhuang et al. | 2017 | 48 patients with unstable angina and 31 patients with STEMI | Classical, intermediate, and nonclassical monocytes | Patients with evidence of thin cap fibroatheroma on OCT had significantly mode circulating intermediate CD14hiCD16+ monocytes | [ |
| Lorenzen et al. | 2011 | 191 subjects undergoing hemodialysis | CD14+TLR4+ monocytes | No association between CD14+TLR4+ and cardiovascular deaths or cardiovascular events | [ |
| Collin et al. | 2015 | 23 patients with nonobstructive CAD undergoing IVUS | CD14+BAP+OCN+ monocytes | CD14+BAP+OCN+ monocytes correlate with the presence of a large necrotic core within coronary artery plaques | [ |
| Meeuwsen et al. | 2019 | 175 subjects undergoing carotid endarterectomy (85% symptomatic, 15% asymptomatic) | Total, classical, intermediate, and nonclassical monocytes | No association between monocyte subpopulations and plaque features of vulnerability. No association between monocyte subpopulations and major adverse cardiovascular events at 3 years of follow-up | [ |
CEUS: contrast-enhanced ultrasound; CAD: coronary artery disease; CVRF: cardiovascular risk factors; OCT: optical coherence tomography; IVUS: intravascular ultrasound.
Figure 1Summary of the main findings of human studies concerned with monocytes and macrophages and atherosclerosis. In subjects with high risk plaques, intermediate CD14hiCD16+ monocytes are enriched in the circulation. Less evidence is available for osteogenic biomarker expressing CD14+BAP+OCN+ monocytes, which appear to be enriched in the peripheral blood of subjects with large necrotic cores within the plaque. On the other hand, in subjects with highly neovascularized plaques, classical CD14hiCD16− monocytes are reduced in the circulation, possibly due to the redistribution into the plaque. Monocytes are activated by OxLDL acting through pattern recognition receptors (PRR). The PRR most frequently implicated in human cardiovascular disease is TLR4. Monocytes locally differentiate into macrophages, which take up OxLDL by means of scavenging receptors. Cholesterol is then transported outside the cell through specialized transporters, including ABCA1. ABCA1 transports cholesterol to nascent HDLs. When cholesterol loading exceeds macrophage efflux capability, the macrophage turns into a foam cell. Human plaques are enriched with NF-kB-expressing macrophages.
Summary of currently available clinical studies on human plaque macrophages.
| Authors | Year | Sample size | Main finding | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brand et al. | 1996 | 18 subjects | Atherosclerotic lesion in the aorta and carotid arteries contains a large proportion of NF-kB-positive macrophages (i.e., M1 macrophages) when compared to healthy arterial segments | [ |
| Johnson et al. | 2014 | 79 CEA specimens | Vulnerable lesions with a large necrotic core contained less MMP14loTIMP3hi-M2 macrophages | [ |
| Stöger et al. | 2012 | 22 ruptured carotid atherosclerosis specimens and 22 adjacent stable controls | In carotid plaques, CD68+HLA-DP/Q/R+ M1 macrophages are enriched near the rupture-prone shoulder. On the other hand, M2 macrophages were enriched on the adventitial side of the vessel | [ |
| Shaikh et al. | 2012 | 32 carotid endarterectomy specimens, 25 femoral artery endarterectomy specimens | Carotid artery plaques have a larger necrotic core and contain more M1 macrophages when compared to femoral artery plaques | [ |
| van Dijk et al. | 2016 | 110 human perirenal aortic plaques | M2 and M1 macrophages are both enriched within progressive and vulnerable atherosclerotic plaques | [ |
| Howard et al. | 2015 | 1640 carotid artery plaques from patients undergoing CEA for secondary stroke prevention | CD68+ macrophage plaque content was associated with a 5-year stroke risk based on the ECST patient database | [ |
| Hellings et al. | 2008 | 500 carotid endarterectomy specimens | A high macrophage infiltration was associated with a high risk of ipsilateral carotid restenosis | [ |
| Hellings et al. | 2010 | 818 carotid endarterectomy specimens | Macrophage infiltration did not predict the 3-year risk of cardiovascular death or nonfatal stroke or nonfatal myocardial infarction. On the other hand, plaque neovascularization was associated with the relevant outcomes | [ |
| Scholtes et al. | 2012 | 236 subjects undergoing carotid endarterectomy for secondary stroke prevention | The proportion of MMP12+ macrophages was associated with major adverse cardiovascular events and stroke at 3 years | [ |
| Gaemperli et al. | 2012 | 9 patients with stroke due to carotid atherosclerosis and 27 subjects with asymptomatic carotid atherosclerosis | In vitro imaging of plaque macrophage infiltration using the macrophage-specific tracer PK11195 allowed to discriminate symptomatic vs. asymptomatic subjects | [ |
M1: proinflammatory M1 macrophages; M2: homeostasis-promoting M2 macrophages; CEA: carotid endarterectomy; MMP: matrix metalloproteinase; TIMP: tissue inhibitor of matrix metalloproteinase.
Summary of the main findings on the relation between monocytes/macrophages and human atherosclerosis.
| Monocyte/macrophage population | Cardiovascular events | Imaging features of vulnerability | Histologic features of vulnerability | Neovascularization |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total monocytes | + | NA | NA | + |
| Circulating CD14hiCD16− | NA | NA | NA | ++ |
| Circulating CD14hiCD16+ | + | + | NA | NA |
| TLR4+ monocytes | — | NA | NA | NA |
| M1 macrophages | ++ | + | +++ | NA |
| M2 macrophages | NA | NA | ++ | NA |
A plus (+) represents a strong clinical evidence in favor of the association, while a minus (-) represents the failure of a well-designed study to establish an association. NA: not available.