Importance of Monocyte Chemoattractant Protein-1 Pathway in Neointimal Hyperplasia After Periarterial Injury in Mice and Monkeys

Author:

Egashira Kensuke1,Zhao Qingwei1,Kataoka Chu1,Ohtani Kishou1,Usui Makoto1,Charo Israel F.1,Nishida Ken-ichi1,Inoue Shujiro1,Katoh Makoto1,Ichiki Toshihiro1,Takeshita Akira1

Affiliation:

1. From the Department of Cardiovascular Medicine (K.E., Q.Z., C.K., K.O., M.U., S.I., T.I., A.T.), Graduate School of Medical Sciences, Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan; Gladstone Institute of Cardiovascular Disease (I.F.C.), San Francisco, Calif; and New Product Research Laboratories (K.-i.N.), Dai-ichi Pharmaceutical Co and Discovery Research Laboratories (M.K.), Tanabe Seiyaku Co, Tokyo, Japan.

Abstract

Neointimal hyperplasia is a major cause of restenosis after coronary intervention. Because vascular injury is now recognized to involve an inflammatory response, monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1) might be involved in underlying mechanisms of restenosis. In the present study, we demonstrate the important role of MCP-1 in neointimal hyperplasia after cuff-induced arterial injury. In the first set of experiments, placement of a nonconstricting cuff around the femoral artery of intact mice and monkeys resulted in inflammation in the early stages and subsequent neointimal hyperplasia at the late stages. We transfected with an N-terminal deletion mutant of the human MCP-1 gene into skeletal muscles to block MCP-1 activity in vivo. This mutant MCP-1 works as a dominant-negative inhibitor of MCP-1. This strategy inhibited early vascular inflammation (monocyte infiltration, increased expression of MCP-1, and inflammatory cytokines) and late neointimal hyperplasia. In the second set of experiments, the cuff-induced neointimal hyperplasia was found to be less in CCR2-deficient mice than in control CCR2 +/+ mice. The MCP-1/CCR2 pathway plays a central role in the pathogenesis of neointimal hyperplasia in cuffed femoral artery of mice and monkeys. Therefore, the MCP-1/CCR2 pathway can be a therapeutic target for human restenosis after coronary intervention.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology

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