| Literature DB >> 36139044 |
Olga S C Snip1, Menno Hoekstra1,2,3, Yiheng Zhang1, Janine J Geerling1, Miranda Van Eck1,2,3.
Abstract
2-Hydroxypropyl-beta-cyclodextrin (2HPβCD) is able to bind and solubilize unesterified cholesterol and may therefore be able to reverse the deposition of cholesterol in macrophages within the aortic vessel wall, a hallmark of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. However, conflicting results regarding the potential of 2HPβCD to induce regression of established atherosclerotic lesions have been described. In the current study, we therefore also investigated the ability of 2HPβCD to stimulate cholesterol removal from macrophage foam cells in vitro and induce the regression of established atherosclerotic lesions in apolipoprotein E knockout (APOE KO) mice. In vitro studies using murine thioglycollate-elicited peritoneal macrophages verified that 2HPβCD is able to induce cholesterol efflux from macrophages in an ATP-binding cassette transporter-independent manner. Switching Western-type-diet-fed APOE KO mice with established atherosclerotic lesions back to a chow diet was associated with a reduction in the hypercholesterolemia extent and an increase in the absolute lesion size and plaque collagen-to-macrophage ratio. Importantly, parallel subcutaneous administration of 2HPβCD was not able to prevent the diet-switch-associated lesion growth or induce atherosclerosis regression. Although in our hands, 2HPβCD does effectively stimulate cellular cholesterol efflux from macrophages, we do not consider it worthwhile to further pursue 2HPβCD as therapeutic moiety in the atherosclerosis regression context.Entities:
Keywords: atherosclerosis regression; cholesterol efflux; cyclodextrin; macrophages; mouse model
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36139044 PMCID: PMC9496214 DOI: 10.3390/biom12091205
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomolecules ISSN: 2218-273X
Figure 12HPβCD induces macrophage cholesterol efflux in an ABC transporter-independent manner. (A) Cholesterol efflux from thioglycollate-elicited peritoneal macrophages of C57BL/6 wild-type mice exposed to different concentrations of 2HPβCD or 2.5% mouse plasma (positive control) for 4 hours. (B) Cholesterol efflux from thioglycollate-elicited peritoneal macrophages from C57BL/6 wild-type (WT PM) and ABCA1/ABCG1 double knockout (A1/G1 DKO PM) mice exposed to 2.5% mouse plasma or 10 mM 2HPβCD for 4 h. Data represent the means + SEM of 6 wells. *** p < 0.001 versus WT.
Figure 22HPβCD treatment fails to induce regression of established atherosclerotic lesions in APOE KO mice. (A) Schematic overview of the three experimental groups of female mice used in our regression study. Plasma total cholesterol levels (B), aortic root atherosclerotic lesion sizes (D), the lesional relative CD68+ macrophage content (E), collagen content (F), cholesterol crystal content (G), and collagen-to-macrophage ratio (H) in female APOE KO mice that were fed a Western-type diet for 6 weeks (Baseline) or subsequently also fed a chow diet for 4 weeks and treated with PBS (Control) or 2 g/kg 2HPβCD. Data are presented as individual data points and the respective group means ± SEM. *** p < 0.001 versus Baseline. Representative images of plaque stainings for neutral lipids (Oil red O), collagen (Trichrome), macrophages (anti-CD68), and cholesterol crystals are displayed in panel (C).
Figure 32HPβCD treatment does not change the systemic inflammatory state. Blood total leukocyte (A), neutrophil (B), lymphocyte (C), and monocyte (D) counts, the calculated NLR (E), and plasma levels of the pro-inflammatory cytokines MCP-1 (F), IL-6 (G), and TNF-alpha (H) in female APOE KO mice that were fed a Western-type diet for 6 weeks (Baseline) or subsequently also fed a chow diet for 4 weeks and treated with PBS (Control) or 2 g/kg 2HPβCD. Data are presented as individual data points and the respective group means ± SEM. * p<0.05, ** p < 0.01, *** p < 0.001 versus Baseline.
Comparison of 2HPβCD-related atherosclerosis regression study setups and outcomes.
| Parameter | Zimmer et al. [ | Kim et al. [ | Current Study |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mice | APOE KO on a C57BL/6J background | APOE KO on a C57BL/6J background | APOE KO on a C57BL/6J background |
| Number of mice per group | 6–8 | 6 | 15 |
| Sex | Unknown | Male | Female |
| Age at study initiation | 12 weeks | 10 weeks | 8–10 weeks |
| Atherosclerosis induction | 8 weeks cholesterol-rich diet containing 1.25% cholesterol, 21% fat, and 19.5% casein (Ssniff) | 12 weeks Paigen’s high-fat diet, containing 1.25% cholesterol, 16% fat, and 0.5% cholic acid (Diet D12336; Research Diets) | 6 weeks Western-type diet, containing 0.25% cholesterol and 16% fat (15% cacao butter and 1% corn oil), and 20% casein (Diet W; Special diets services) |
| Regression induction | 4 weeks chow diet (unknown supplier) | 4 weeks chow diet (unknown supplier) | 4 weeks chow diet (special diets services) |
| Compound treatment | Subcutaneous injection with 2HPβCD (2 g/kg bodyweight; unkown supplier) or 0.9% NaCl as vehicle control twice a week | Subcutaneous injection with 2HPβCD (1 g/kg bodyweight; Cyclolab) or its solvent PBS as vehicle control twice a week | Subcutaneous injection with 2HPβCD (2 g/kg bodyweight; Sigma) or its solvent PBS as vehicle control every other day |
| Plasma total cholesterol levels | Baseline: 900 mg/dL | Baseline: Unknown | Baseline: 1198 mg/dL |
| Aortic root lesion sizes | Baseline: 59% of total vessel area | Baseline: Unknown | Baseline: 37 × 104 µm2 (24.9% of total area) |
Average plasma total cholesterol levels and aortic root lesion sizes from the studies of Zimmer et al. and Kim et al. were estimated from the relevant bar graphs displayed in their respective publications.