Literature DB >> 32671866

Moderate Alcohol Consumption Targets S100β+ Vascular Stem Cells and Attenuates Injury-Induced Neointimal Hyperplasia.

Weimin Liu1, Suzie Harman2, Mariana DiLuca2, Denise Burtenshaw2, Eoin Corcoran2, Paul A Cahill2, Eileen M Redmond1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Stem cells present in the vessel wall may be triggered in response to injurious stimuli to undergo differentiation and contribute to vascular disease development. Our aim was to determine the effect of moderate alcohol (EtOH) exposure on the expansion and differentiation of S100 calcium-binding protein B positive (S100β+ ) resident vascular stem cells and their contribution to pathologic vessel remodeling in a mouse model of arteriosclerosis. METHODS AND
RESULTS: Lineage tracing analysis of S100β+ cells was performed in male and female S100β-eGFP/Cre/ERT2-dTomato transgenic mice treated daily with or without EtOH by oral gavage (peak BAC: 15 mM or 0.07%) following left common carotid artery ligation for 14 days. Carotid arteries (ligated or sham-operated) were harvested for morphological analysis and confocal assessment of fluorescent-tagged S100 β + cells in FFPE carotid cross sections. Ligation-induced carotid remodeling was more robust in males than in females. EtOH-gavaged mice had less adventitial thickening and markedly reduced neointimal formation compared to controls, with a more pronounced inhibitory effect in males compared to females. There was significant expansion of S100β+ -marked cells in vessels postligation, primarily in the neointimal compartment. EtOH treatment reduced the fraction of S100β+ cells in carotid cross sections, concomitant with attenuated remodeling. In vitro, EtOH attenuated Sonic Hedgehog-stimulated myogenic differentiation (as evidenced by reduced calponin and myosin heavy chain expression) of isolated murine S100β+ vascular stem cells.
CONCLUSIONS: These data highlight resident vascular S100β+ stem cells as a novel target population for alcohol and suggest that regulation of these progenitors in adult arteries, particularly in males, may be an important mechanism contributing to the antiatherogenic effects of moderate alcohol consumption.
© 2020 by the Research Society on Alcoholism.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Alcohol; Atherosclerosis; Cardioprotective; Gender Differences; S100β; Stem Cells

Year:  2020        PMID: 32671866      PMCID: PMC7722153          DOI: 10.1111/acer.14415

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Alcohol Clin Exp Res        ISSN: 0145-6008            Impact factor:   3.455


  56 in total

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