Affiliation:
1. From the Department of Biology (S.L.K., M.K.), Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge; and Division of Cardiology Department of Medicine (M.H.P.), Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Mass.
Abstract
Objective—
Scavenger receptor class B type I (SR-BI)/apolipoprotein E (apoE) double knockout (dKO) mice exhibit many features of human coronary heart disease (CHD), including occlusive coronary atherosclerosis, cardiac hypertrophy, myocardial infarctions, and premature death. Here we determined the influence of B and T lymphocytes, which can contribute to atherosclerosis, ischemia–reperfusion injury, and cardiomyocyte death, on pathology in dKO mice.
Method and Results—
The lymphocyte-deficient SR-BI/apoE/recombination activating gene 2 (RAG2) triple knockout mice and corresponding dKO controls generated for this study exhibited essentially identical lipid-rich coronary occlusions, myocardial infarctions, cardiac dysfunction, and premature death (average lifespans 41.6±0.6 and 42.0±0.5 days, respectively).
Conclusions—
B and T lymphocytes and associated immunoglobulin-mediated inflammation are not essential for the development and progression of CHD in dKO mice. Strikingly, the dKO mice bred for this study (mixed C57BL/6×SV129×BALB/c background; strain 2) compared with the previously described dKO mice (75:25 C57BL/6:SV129 background; strain 1) had a shorter mean lifespan and steeper survival curve, characteristics especially attractive for studying the effects of environmental, pharmacological, and genetic manipulations on cardiac pathophysiology.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Cited by
18 articles.
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