4.8 Article

Deficiency of the Long Pentraxin PTX3 Promotes Vascular Inflammation and Atherosclerosis

Journal

CIRCULATION
Volume 120, Issue 8, Pages 699-U110

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.108.806547

Keywords

genes; immunology; inflammation; vasculature

Funding

  1. Societa Italiana Studio Aterosclerosi Sezione Lombardia
  2. European Commission [LSHB-CT-2005-518167]
  3. MUGEN [INNO-CHEM
  4. LSHG-CT-2005-005203]
  5. TOLERAGE [HEALTH-F4-2008-202156]
  6. Ministero dell'Istruzione, Universita e della Ricerca [FIRB RBIN04EKCX]
  7. CARIPLO Foundation
  8. University of Milan
  9. Fondazione Humanitas per la Ricerca
  10. Italian Association for Cancer Research

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Background-Immune responses participate in several phases of atherosclerosis; there is, in fact, increasing evidence that both adaptive immunity and innate immunity tightly regulate atherogenesis. Pentraxins are a superfamily of acute-phase proteins that includes short pentraxins such as C-reactive protein or long pentraxins such as PTX3, a molecule acting as the humoral arm of innate immunity. To address the potential role of PTX3 in atherogenesis, we first investigated the expression of PTX3 during atherogenesis, generated double-knockout mice lacking PTX3 and apolipoprotein E, and then studied the effect of murine PTX3 deficiency on plasma lipids, atherosclerosis development, and gene expression pattern in the vascular wall. Methods and Results-PTX3 expression increases in the vascular wall of apolipoprotein E-knockout mice from 3 up to 18 months of age. Double-knockout mice lacking PTX3 and apolipoprotein E were fed an atherogenic diet for 16 weeks. Aortic lesions were significantly increased in double-knockout mice and mice heterozygous for PTX3 compared with apolipoprotein E-knockout mice. Mice lacking PTX3 showed a more pronounced inflammatory profile in the vascular wall as detected by cDNA microarray and quantitative polymerase chain reaction analysis and an increased macrophage accumulation within the plaque. Finally, lesion size correlated with the number of bone marrow monocytes. Conclusion-PTX3 has atheroprotective effects in mice, which, in light of the cardioprotective effects recently reported, suggests a cardiovascular protective function of the long pentraxin 3 through the modulation of the immunoinflammatory balance in the cardiovascular system. (Circulation. 2009; 120: 699-708.)

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