4.7 Article

Eosinophils Protect Mice From Angiotensin-II Perfusion-Induced Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm

Journal

CIRCULATION RESEARCH
Volume 128, Issue 2, Pages 188-202

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.120.318182

Keywords

cardiovascular disease; eosinophil; inflammation; interleukin; monocyte

Funding

  1. Finance Science and Technology Projects of Hainan Province [ZDYF2020207]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [91939107, 81770487, 81870328, U2004203]
  3. University-College Joint Cultivation Fund of Zhengzhou University [2016_BSTDJJ-19]
  4. CAMS Innovation Fund for Medical Sciences [2019-I2M-5-023]
  5. fund of Key Laboratory of Emergency and Trauma (Hainan Medical University) of Ministry of Education [KLET-201917]
  6. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute [HL60942, HL123568, HL151627, HL34636, HL80472]
  7. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke [AG063839]
  8. American Heart Association Postdoctoral Fellowship [17POST33670564]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Blood eosinophil count and ECP are associated with cardiovascular diseases, and eosinophils have been found to accumulate in AAA lesions. Eosinophil deficiency exacerbates AAA growth, while eosinophils play a protective role by releasing IL4 and cationic proteins to regulate macrophage and monocyte polarization and block NF-kappa B activation in aortic inflammatory and vascular cells.
Rationale: Blood eosinophil count and ECP (eosinophil cationic protein) associate with human cardiovascular diseases. Yet, whether eosinophils play a role in cardiovascular disease remains untested. The current study detected eosinophil accumulation in human and murine abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) lesions, suggesting eosinophil participation in this aortic disease. Objective: To test whether and how eosinophils affect AAA growth. Methods and Results: Population-based randomized clinically controlled screening trials revealed higher blood eosinophil count in 579 male patients with AAA than in 5063 non-AAA control (0.236 +/- 0.182 versus 0.211 +/- 0.154, 10(9)/L, P<0.001). Univariate (odds ratio, 1.381, P<0.001) and multivariate (odds ratio, 1.237, P=0.031) logistic regression analyses indicated that increased blood eosinophil count in patients with AAA served as an independent risk factor of human AAA. Immunostaining and immunoblot analyses detected eosinophil accumulation and eosinophil cationic protein expression in human and murine AAA lesions. Results showed that eosinophil deficiency exacerbated AAA growth with increased lesion inflammatory cell contents, matrix-degrading protease activity, angiogenesis, cell proliferation and apoptosis, and smooth muscle cell loss using angiotensin-II perfusion-induced AAA in Apoe(-/-) and eosinophil-deficient Apoe(-/-)Delta dblGATA mice. Eosinophil deficiency increased lesion chemokine expression, muted lesion expression of IL (interleukin) 4 and eosinophil-associated-ribonuclease-1 (mEar1 [mouse EOS-associated-ribonuclease-1], human ECP homolog), and slanted M1 macrophage polarization. In cultured macrophages and monocytes, eosinophil-derived IL4 and mEar1 polarized M2 macrophages, suppressed CD11b(+)Ly6C(hi) monocytes, and increased CD11b(+)Ly6C(lo) monocytes. mEar1 treatment or adoptive transfer of eosinophil from wild-type and Il13(-/-) mice, but not eosinophil from Il4(-/-) mice, blocked AAA growth in Apoe(-/-)Delta dblGATA mice. Immunofluorescent staining and immunoblot analyses demonstrated a role for eosinophil IL4 and mEar1 in blocking NF-kappa B (nuclear factor-kappa B) activation in macrophages, smooth muscle cells, and endothelial cells. Conclusions: Eosinophils play a protective role in AAA by releasing IL4 and cationic proteins such as mEar1 to regulate macrophage and monocyte polarization and to block NF-kappa B activation in aortic inflammatory and vascular cells.

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