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Macrophage Infiltration in the Saccular Intracranial Aneurysm Wall as a Response to Locally Lysed Erythrocytes That Promote Degeneration

Authors :
Riikka Tulamo
Salla Kaitainen
Juhana Frösen
Juha Hernesniemi
Mika Niemelä
Timo Liimatainen
Satu Lehti
Petri Honkanen
Petri T. Kovanen
Eliisa Ollikainen
Source :
Journal of neuropathology and experimental neurology. 77(10)
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Saccular intracranial aneurysm (sIA) rupture is often fatal. Rupture-prone sIA walls are infiltrated by macrophages expressing hemoglobin-receptor CD163, suggesting a role for erythrocyte lysis in the degenerative remodeling predisposing to rupture. We therefore studied erythrocyte remnants in 16 unruptured and 20 ruptured sIA walls using histology and immunohistochemistry. Glycophorin A (GPA), an erythrocyte membrane protein, was present in 34/36 (94%) sIA walls and correlated with loss of αSMA+ cells, reflecting loss of mural smooth muscle cells ([SMCs]; r = -0.592, p < 0.001), wall degeneration (p = 0.008), and rupture (p = 0.005). GPA correlated with high numbers of CD163+ and CD68+ phagocytes (r = 0.65 and r = 0.54, p ≤ 0.001 for both). CD163+ phagocytes were mostly HLA-DR-. Interestingly, single SMCs expressed HLA-DR and also CD163 was expressed in sporadic SMCs, which may reflect their response to hemoglobin accumulation. GPA associated with iron (p = 0.014) was detectable by MRI. An additional 11 sIAs were therefore imaged ex vivo with a 4.7 T MRI prior to histology. In the sIA walls, high GPA and iron accumulation associated with signal intensity in T1-weighted gradient echo MRI. We conclude that accumulation of lysed erythrocytes is a potential driver of inflammatory response in the sIA walls and is associated with the degenerative wall remodeling, thereby predisposing to rupture.

Details

ISSN :
15546578
Volume :
77
Issue :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of neuropathology and experimental neurology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....acea653ccd18bbc29144d558c3fea72a