Affiliation:
1. the Departments of Medicine (Cardiology) (T.A., D.C., Y.T., J.M.I.), Surgery (Cardiovascular) (J.F.S.), and Biomedical Research (M.K., S.R., J.P.), St Elizabeth's Medical Center, Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, Mass.
Abstract
Background
Delinquent reendothelialization (rET) has been shown to have a permissive, if not facilitatory, impact on smooth muscle cell proliferation. This inverse relation has been attributed to certain functions of the endothelium, including barrier regulation of permeability, thrombogenicity, and leukocyte adherence, as well as production of growth-inhibitory molecules. Accordingly, the present investigation was designed to test the hypothesis that an endothelial cell (EC) mitogen could serve as the basis for a novel gene therapy strategy designed to facilitate EC regeneration, reduce neointimal thickening, and promote recovery of EC dysfunction after balloon injury.
Methods and Results
New Zealand White rabbits underwent simultaneous balloon injury and gene transfer of one femoral artery with phVEGF
165
, encoding the 165–amino acid isoform of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), or pGSVLacZ. In each animal transfected with phVEGF
165
or pGSVLacZ, the contralateral femoral artery was also subjected to balloon injury but not to gene transfer. For pGSVLacZ, rET remained incomplete at 4 weeks after transfection; in contrast, phVEGF
165
produced prompt rET, which was 95% complete by 1 week. Furthermore, rET in the contralateral, balloon-injured, nontransfected limb of the VEGF group was similarly accelerated. Consequently, intimal thickening was diminished, thrombotic occlusion was less frequent, and recovery of EC-dependent vasomotor reactivity was accelerated in VEGF transfectants compared with control animals. A similar benefit was observed for the contralateral, balloon-injured, nontransfected limb.
Conclusions
Catheter-mediated, site-specific arterial gene transfer of phVEGF
165
can accelerate rET at local and remote sites, leading to inhibition of neointimal thickening, reduction in thrombogenicity, and restoration of endothelium-dependent vasomotor reactivity. These findings support the notion that gene transfer encoding for an EC-specific mitogen may be useful for preventing the complications, including restenosis, of balloon angioplasty.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Cited by
232 articles.
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