Vascular Neointimal Formation and Signaling Pathway Activation in Response to Stent Injury in Insulin-Resistant and Diabetic Animals

Author:

Jonas Michael1,Edelman Elazer R.1,Groothuis Adam1,Baker Aaron B.1,Seifert Philip1,Rogers Campbell1

Affiliation:

1. From the Cardiovascular Division, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston (M.J., E.R.E., C.R.), and the Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge (M.J., E.R.E., A.G., A.B.B., P.S., C.R.), Mass.

Abstract

Diabetes and insulin resistance are associated with increased disease risk and poor outcomes from cardiovascular interventions. Even drug-eluting stents exhibit reduced efficacy in patients with diabetes. We now report the first study of vascular response to stent injury in insulin-resistant and diabetic animal models. Endovascular stents were expanded in the aortae of obese insulin-resistant and type 2 diabetic Zucker rats, in streptozotocin-induced type 1 diabetic Sprague-Dawley rats, and in matched controls. Insulin-resistant rats developed thicker neointima (0.46±0.08 versus 0.37±0.06 mm 2 , P =0.05), with decreased lumen area (2.95±0.26 versus 3.29±0.15 mm 2 , P =0.03) 14 days after stenting compared with controls, but without increased vascular inflammation (ED1+ tissue macrophages). Insulin-resistant and diabetic rat vessels did exhibit markedly altered signaling pathway activation 1 and 2 weeks after stenting, with up to a 98% increase in p-ERK (anti-phospho ERK) and a 54% reduction in p-Akt (anti-phospho Akt) stained cells. Western blotting confirmed a profound effect of insulin resistance and diabetes on Akt and ERK signaling in stented segments. p-ERK/p-Akt ratio in stented segments uniquely correlated with neointimal response ( R 2 =0.888, P =0.04) in insulin-resistant and type 1 and 2 diabetic rats, but not in lean controls. Transfemoral aortic stenting in rats provides insight into vascular responses in insulin resistance and diabetes. Shifts in ERK and Akt signaling related to insulin resistance may reflect altered tissue repair in diabetes accompanied by a shift in metabolic:proliferative balance. These findings may help explain the increased vascular morbidity in diabetes and suggest specific therapies for patients with insulin resistance and diabetes.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology

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