4.7 Article

Modifiable Cardiovascular Risk, Hematopoiesis, and Innate Immunity

Journal

CIRCULATION RESEARCH
Volume 126, Issue 9, Pages 1242-1259

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.120.315936

Keywords

arteriosclerosis; atherosclerosis; hematopoiesis; lifestyle; macrophages

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [HL135752, HL131478, HL142494, HL139598, NS108419]
  2. MGH Research Scholar program - Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [SCHL 2221/1-1]

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Unhealthy diet, lack of exercise, psychosocial stress, and insufficient sleep are increasingly prevalent modifiable risk factors for cardiovascular disease. Accumulating evidence indicates that these risk factors may fuel chronic inflammatory processes that are active in atherosclerosis and lead to myocardial infarction and stroke. In concert with hyperlipidemia, maladaptive immune system activities can contribute to disease progression and increase the probability of adverse events. In this review, we discuss recent insight into how the above modifiable risk factors influence innate immunity. Specifically, we focus on pathways that raise systemic myeloid cell numbers and modulate immune cell phenotypes, reviewing hematopoiesis, leukocyte trafficking, and innate immune cell accumulation in cardiovascular organs. Often, relevant mechanisms that begin with lifestyle choices and lead to cardiovascular events span multiple organ systems, including the central nervous, endocrine, metabolic, hematopoietic, immune and, finally, the cardiovascular system. We argue that deciphering such pathways provides not only support for preventive interventions but also opportunities to develop biomimetic immunomodulatory therapeutics that mitigate cardiovascular inflammation.

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