4.6 Article

Intermittent hypoxia-activated cyclooxygenase pathway: role in atherosclerosis

Journal

EUROPEAN RESPIRATORY JOURNAL
Volume 42, Issue 2, Pages 404-413

Publisher

EUROPEAN RESPIRATORY SOC JOURNALS LTD
DOI: 10.1183/09031936.00096512

Keywords

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Funding

  1. le vivier de la recherche medicale from Grenoble University of Medicine
  2. PHRC
  3. ResMed Foundation
  4. Maine de Paris (Research in Paris)
  5. French-Swedish Foundation
  6. Swedish Heart and Lung Foundation

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Intermittent hypoxia, the main stimulus of obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA), induces inflammation, leading to early atherosclerosis. Whether the cydooxygenase (COX) pathway contributes to intermittent hypoxia-induced atherosclerosis remains to be determined. We studied the effects of 8-weeks of intermittent hypoxia exposure on COX-pathway gene expression and atherosclerosis, and the influence of COX-1 inhibition by SC-560 on atherosclerosis progression in aortas of apolipoprotein E-/- mice. Urinary 11-dehydrothromboxane B-2 (11-dTXB(2)) was assessed in 50 OSA subjects free of cardiovascular risk factor matched for age and body mass index with 25 controls, and 56 OSA with cardiovascular risk factor. Intermittent hypoxia significantly increased atherosclerotic lesion sizes, mRNA levels of COX-1 and thromboxane synthase (TXBS). Lesion sizes correlated to COX-1 (r=0.654, p=0.0003) and TXBS (r=0.693, p<0.0001) mRNA levels. COX-1 inhibition reduced lesion progression in intermittent hypoxia mice only (p=0.04). Urinary 11-dTXB(2) was similar in OSA subjects free of cardiovascular risk factor and controls, but was increased by 13% (p=0.007) in OSA subjects with cardiovascular risk factor compared with those without. Although OSA itself was not associated with increased urinary 11-dTXB(2) concentration, the COX-1 pathway was activated in intermittent hypoxia-exposed mice and in OSA subjects presenting with cardiovascular risk factor, and may contribute to intermittent hypcoda-induced atherogenesis. COX-1 inhibition could be of clinical interest in the prevention of cardiovascular morbidity in OSA.

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