Abstract
AbstractAberrant macrophage polarization is a major contributor to the onset and progression of atherosclerosis. Despite this, macrophage polarization during in early stages of human atherosclerotic disease is poorly understood. Using transcriptomic analysis of macrophages recovered from early-stage human atherosclerotic lesions, we have identified a unique gene expression profile dissimilar to that observed in later stages of disease that is characterized by upregulation of the hematopoietic transcription factor GATA2. GATA2 overexpressionin vitrorecapitulated defects observed in patient macrophages, including deficiencies in the uptake and processing of apoptotic cells, and in the catalysis of atherogenic protein modifications, with GATA2 knockdown abrogating these defects. Our data describe a previously unreported macrophage differentiation state present in early atheroma formation and identifies GATA2 as a driver of macrophage functional defects during the early stages of atherosclerosis in humans.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory