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Ablation of lysozyme M-positive cells prevents aircraft noise-induced vascular damage without improving cerebral side effects

Authors :
Philip Wenzel
Clemens Sommer
Eva Schramm
Ari Waisman
Katrin Frauenknecht
Sebastian Steven
Thomas Münzel
Sanela Kalinovic
Katie Frenis
Adrian Gericke
Johanna Helmstädter
Swenja Kröller-Schön
Yue Ruan
Matthias Oelze
Maria Teresa Bayo Jimenez
Omar Hahad
Subao Jiang
Andreas Daiber
Source :
Basic Research in Cardiology
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Aircraft noise induces vascular and cerebral inflammation and oxidative stress causing hypertension and cardiovascular/cerebral dysfunction. With the present studies, we sought to determine the role of myeloid cells in the vascular vs. cerebral consequences of exposure to aircraft noise. Toxin-mediated ablation of lysozyme M+ (LysM+) myeloid cells was performed in LysMCreiDTR mice carrying a cre-inducible diphtheria toxin receptor. In the last 4d of toxin treatment, the animals were exposed to noise at maximum and mean sound pressure levels of 85 and 72 dB(A), respectively. Flow cytometry analysis revealed accumulation of CD45+, CD11b+, F4/80+, and Ly6G−Ly6C+ cells in the aortas of noise-exposed mice, which was prevented by LysM+ cell ablation in the periphery, whereas brain infiltrates were even exacerbated upon ablation. Aircraft noise-induced increases in blood pressure and endothelial dysfunction of the aorta and retinal/mesenteric arterioles were almost completely normalized by ablation. Correspondingly, reactive oxygen species in the aorta, heart, and retinal/mesenteric vessels were attenuated in ablated noise-exposed mice, while microglial activation and abundance in the brain was greatly increased. Expression of phagocytic NADPH oxidase (NOX-2) and vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 (VCAM-1) mRNA in the aorta was reduced, while NFκB signaling appeared to be activated in the brain upon ablation. In sum, we show dissociation of cerebral and peripheral inflammatory reactions in response to aircraft noise after LysM+ cell ablation, wherein peripheral myeloid inflammatory cells represent a dominant part of the pathomechanism for noise stress-induced cardiovascular effects and their central nervous counterparts, microglia, as key mediators in stress responses.

Details

ISSN :
14351803
Volume :
116
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Basic research in cardiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5dbf9d73e62b26367ad256dbebe769d2