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Genetic and Pharmacologic Inhibition of the Neutrophil Elastase Inhibits Experimental Atherosclerosis
Author(s) -
Wen Guanmei,
An Weiwei,
Chen Jiangyong,
Maguire Eithne M.,
Chen Qishan,
Yang Feng,
Pearce Stuart W. A.,
Kyriakides Maria,
Zhang Li,
Ye Shu,
Nourshargh Sussan,
Xiao Qingzhong
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of the american heart association
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.494
H-Index - 85
ISSN - 2047-9980
DOI - 10.1161/jaha.117.008187
Subject(s) - proinflammatory cytokine , bone marrow , medicine , neutrophil elastase , inflammation , apolipoprotein b , endocrinology , apolipoprotein e , knockout mouse , elastase , foam cell , macrophage , lipoprotein , immunology , cholesterol , biology , receptor , biochemistry , enzyme , disease , in vitro
Background To investigate whether neutrophil elastase ( NE ) plays a causal role in atherosclerosis, and the molecular mechanisms involved. Methods and Results NE genetic–deficient mice (Apolipoprotein E −/− / NE −/− mice), bone marrow transplantation, and a specific NE inhibitor ( GW 311616A) were employed in this study to establish the causal role of NE in atherosclerosis. Aortic expression of NE mRNA and plasma NE activity was significantly increased in high‐fat diet ( HFD )–fed wild‐type ( WT ) (Apolipoprotein E −/− ) mice but, as expected, not in NE ‐deficient mice. Selective NE knockout markedly reduced HFD ‐induced atherosclerosis and significantly increased indicators of atherosclerotic plaque stability. While plasma lipid profiles were not affected by NE deficiency, decreased levels of circulating proinflammatory cytokines and inflammatory monocytes (Ly6C hi / CD 11b + ) were observed in NE ‐deficient mice fed with an HFD for 12 weeks as compared with WT . Bone marrow reconstitution of WT mice with NE −/− bone marrow cells significantly reduced HFD ‐induced atherosclerosis, while bone marrow reconstitution of NE −/− mice with WT bone marrow cells restored the pathological features of atherosclerotic plaques induced by HFD in NE ‐deficient mice. In line with these findings, pharmacological inhibition of NE in WT mice through oral administration of NE inhibitor GW 311616A also significantly reduced atherosclerosis. Mechanistically, we demonstrated that NE promotes foam cell formation by increasing ATP ‐binding cassette transporter ABCA 1 protein degradation and inhibiting macrophage cholesterol efflux. Conclusions We outlined a pathogenic role for NE in foam cell formation and atherosclerosis development. Consequently, inhibition of NE may represent a potential therapeutic approach to treating cardiovascular disease.

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