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DNA damage and repair in a model of rat vascular injury
Author(s) -
Amalia Forte,
Mauro Finicelli,
Mario Grossi,
Mariano Vicchio,
Nicola Alessio,
Pasquale Santè,
Marisa De Feo,
Maurizio Cotrufo,
Liberato Berrino,
Francesco Rossi,
Umberto Galderisi,
Marilena Cipollaro
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
clinical science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.91
H-Index - 138
eISSN - 1470-8736
pISSN - 0143-5221
DOI - 10.1042/cs20090416
Subject(s) - arteriotomy , immunostaining , dna damage , dna repair , adventitia , oxidative stress , pathology , apoptosis , neointima , western blot , real time polymerase chain reaction , biology , microbiology and biotechnology , medicine , andrology , dna , gene , restenosis , immunohistochemistry , endocrinology , genetics , artery , stent
Restenosis rate following vascular interventions still limits their long-term success. Oxidative stress plays a relevant role in this pathophysiological phenomenon, but less attention has been devoted to its effects on DNA damage and to the subsequent mechanisms of repair. We analysed in a model of arteriotomy-induced stenosis in rat carotids the time-dependent expression of DNA damage markers and of DNA repair genes, together with the assessment of proliferation and apoptosis indexes. The expression of the oxidative DNA damage marker 7,8-dihydro-8-oxo-2'-deoxyguanosine was increased at 3 and 7 days after arteriotomy, with immunostaining distributed in the injured vascular wall and in perivascular tissue. The expression of the DNA damage marker phospho-H2A.X was less relevant but increasing from 4 hrs to 7 days after arteriotomy, with immunostaining prevalently present in the adventitia and, to a lesser extent, in medial smooth muscle cells at the injury site. RT-PCR indicated a decrease of 8 out of 12 genes of the DNA repair machinery we selected from 4 hrs to 7 days after arteriotomy with the exception of increased Muyth and Slk genes (p<0.05). Western Blot revealed a decrease of p53 and catalase at 3 days after arteriotomy (p<0.05). A maximal 7% of BrdU-positive cells in endothelium and media occurred at 7 days after arteriotomy, while the apoptotic index peaked at 3 days after injury (p<0.05). Our results highlight a persistent DNA damage presumably related to a temporary decreased expression of the DNA repair machinery and of the antioxidant enzyme catalase, playing a role in stenosis progression.

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