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Atheroprotection Through SYK Inhibition Fails in Established Disease when Local Macrophage Proliferation Dominates Lesion Progression
Alexandra Lindau
Carmen Härdtner
Sonja Patricia Hergeth
Kelly Daryll Blanz
Bianca Dufner
Natalie Hoppe
Nathaly Anto Michel
Jan Kornemann
Jiadai Zou
Louisa Maria Sophie Gerhardt
Timo Heidt
Florian Willecke
Serjosha Geis
Peter Stachon
Dennis Wolf
Ralf Gilsbach
Lutz Hein
Constantin von Zur Mühlen
Christoph Bode
Andreas Zirlik
Ingo Hilgendorf
出版
Universität
, 2016
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=aLdHzgEACAAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
註釋
Abstract: Macrophages in the arterial intima sustain chronic inflammation during atherogenesis. Under hypercholesterolemic conditions murine Ly6Chigh monocytes surge in the blood and spleen, infiltrate nascent atherosclerotic plaques, and differentiate into macrophages that proliferate locally as disease progresses. Spleen tyrosine kinase (SYK) may participate in downstream signaling of various receptors that mediate these processes. We tested the effect of the SYK inhibitor fostamatinib on hypercholesterolemia-associated myelopoiesis and plaque formation in Apoe−/− mice during early and established atherosclerosis. Mice consuming a high cholesterol diet supplemented with fostamatinib for 8 weeks developed less atherosclerosis. Histologic and flow cytometric analysis of aortic tissue showed that fostamatinib reduced the content of Ly6Chigh monocytes and macrophages. SYK inhibition limited Ly6Chigh monocytosis through interference with GM-CSF/IL-3 stimulated myelopoiesis, attenuated cell adhesion to the intimal surface, and blocked M-CSF stimulated monocyte to macrophage differentiation. In Apoe−/− mice with established atherosclerosis, however, fostamatinib treatment did not limit macrophage accumulation or lesion progression despite a significant reduction in blood monocyte counts, as lesional macrophages continued to proliferate. Thus, inhibition of hypercholesterolemia-associated monocytosis, monocyte infiltration, and differentiation by SYK antagonism attenuates early atherogenesis but not established disease when local macrophage proliferation dominates lesion progression