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Membrane-Bound Thrombomodulin Regulates Macrophage Inflammation in Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm

Authors :
Chao Han Lai
Tsung Lin Cheng
Bi Ing Chang
Hua Lin Wu
Min Hua Cheng
Yi-Heng Li
Chih Yuan Ma
Hung Wen Tsai
Guey Yueh Shi
Chawn Yau Luo
Kuan Chieh Wang
Yun Yan Hsu
Source :
Arteriosclerosis, thrombosis, and vascular biology. 35(11)
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Objective— Thrombomodulin (TM), a glycoprotein constitutively expressed in the endothelium, is well known for its anticoagulant and anti-inflammatory properties. Paradoxically, we recently found that monocytic membrane-bound TM (ie, endogenous TM expression in monocytes) triggers lipopolysaccharide- and gram-negative bacteria–induced inflammatory responses. However, the significance of membrane-bound TM in chronic sterile vascular inflammation and the development of abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) remains undetermined. Approach and Results— Implicating a potential role for membrane-bound TM in AAA, we found that TM signals were predominantly localized to macrophages and vascular smooth muscle cells in human aneurysm specimens. Characterization of the CaCl 2 -induced AAA in mice revealed that during aneurysm development, TM expression was mainly localized in infiltrating macrophages and vascular smooth muscle cells. To investigate the function of membrane-bound TM in vivo, transgenic mice with myeloid- (LysMcre/TM flox/flox ) and vascular smooth muscle cell–specific (SM22-cre tg /TM flox/flox ) TM ablation and their respective wild-type controls (TM flox/flox and SM22-cre tg /TM +/+ ) were generated. In the mouse CaCl 2 -induced AAA model, deficiency of myeloid TM, but not vascular smooth muscle cell TM, inhibited macrophage accumulation, attenuated proinflammatory cytokine and matrix metalloproteinase-9 production, and finally mitigated elastin destruction and aortic dilatation. In vitro TM-deficient monocytes/macrophages, versus TM wild-type counterparts, exhibited attenuation of proinflammatory mediator expression, adhesion to endothelial cells, and generation of reactive oxygen species. Consistently, myeloid TM–deficient hyperlipidemic mice (ApoE −/− /LysMcre/TM flox/flox ) were resistant to AAA formation induced by angiotensin II infusion, along with reduced macrophage infiltration, suppressed matrix metalloproteinase activities, and diminished oxidative stress. Conclusions— Membrane-bound TM in macrophages plays an essential role in the development of AAA by enhancing proinflammatory mediator elaboration, macrophage recruitment, and oxidative stress.

Details

ISSN :
15244636
Volume :
35
Issue :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Arteriosclerosis, thrombosis, and vascular biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....211e25d407274f7c28206e54983c23b9