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Effect of intraplaque angiogenesis to atherosclerotic rupture-prone plaque induced by high shear stress in rabbit model
Author(s) -
Juhui Qiu,
Daoxi Lei,
Jianjun Hu,
Tieying Yin,
Kang Zhang,
Donghong Yu,
Guixue Wang
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
regenerative biomaterials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.166
H-Index - 25
ISSN - 2056-3426
DOI - 10.1093/rb/rbx007
Subject(s) - angiogenesis , enos , shear stress , endothelium , vacuole , chemistry , pathology , anatomy , medicine , nitric oxide synthase , nitric oxide , cytoplasm , cancer research , materials science , biochemistry , composite material , organic chemistry
Atherosclerotic prone-rupture plaque is mainly localized in the region of the entrance to the stenosis with high shear stress and the reasons are largely unknown. Our hypothesis is that such a distribution of cells in atherosclerotic plaque may depend on the angiogenesis. Silastic collars induced regions of high shear stress (20.68 ± 5.27 dynes/cm 2 ) in the upstream flow and low shear stress (12.25 ± 1.28 dynes/cm 2 ) in the downstream flow in carotid arteries. Compared with the low shear stress region, plaques in the high shear stress region showed more intraplaque haemorrhaging, less collagen and higher apoptotic rates of vascular smooth muscle cells; endothelial cells (ECs) in the high shear stress region were characterized with integrity and high endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) expression (1570.3 ± 345.5% vs 172.9 ± 49.9%). The number of intraplaque microvessels is very high in the high shear stress region (15 ± 1.8 n/mm 2 vs 3.5 ± 0.4 n/mm 2 ), and the microvessels in the plaque show ECs were abnormal, with membrane blebs, intracytoplasmic vacuoles and leukocyte infiltration. Our current study reveals that the integrity of the endothelium and the vulnerability of atherosclerotic plaques are simultaneously localized in high shear stress regions, and we provide evidence for the first time that microvessels in the intraplaque maybe responsible for rupture-prone plaque formation in the high shear stress region.

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