Johansson Fredrik, Kramer Farah, Barnhart Shelley, Kanter Jenny E, Vaisar Tomas, Merrill Rachel D, Geng Linda, Oka Kazuhiro, Chan Lawrence, Chait Alan, Heinecke Jay W, Bornfeldt Karin E
Department of Pathology, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008 Feb 12;105(6):2082-7. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0709958105. Epub 2008 Feb 5.
Cardiovascular disease, largely because of disruption of atherosclerotic lesions, accounts for the majority of deaths in people with type 1 diabetes. Recent mouse models have provided insights into the accelerated atherosclerotic lesion initiation in diabetes, but it is unknown whether diabetes directly worsens more clinically relevant advanced lesions. We therefore used an LDL receptor-deficient mouse model, in which type 1 diabetes can be induced at will, to investigate the effects of diabetes on preexisting lesions. Advanced lesions were induced by feeding mice a high-fat diet for 16 weeks before induction of diabetes. Diabetes, independently of lesion size, increased intraplaque hemorrhage and plaque disruption in the brachiocephalic artery of mice fed low-fat or high-fat diets for an additional 14 weeks. Hyperglycemia was not sufficient to induce plaque disruption. Furthermore, diabetes resulted in increased accumulation of monocytic cells positive for S100A9, a proinflammatory biomarker for cardiovascular events, and for a macrophage marker protein, without increasing lesion macrophage content. S100A9 immunoreactivity correlated with intraplaque hemorrhage. Aggressive lowering primarily of triglyceride-rich lipoproteins prevented both plaque disruption and the increased S100A9 in diabetic atherosclerotic lesions. Conversely, oleate promoted macrophage differentiation into an S100A9-positive population in vitro, thereby mimicking the effects of diabetes. Thus, diabetes increases plaque disruption, independently of effects on plaque initiation, through a mechanism that requires triglyceride-rich lipoproteins and is associated with an increased accumulation of S100A9-positive monocytic cells. These findings indicate an important link between diabetes, plaque disruption, and the innate immune system.
心血管疾病在很大程度上是由于动脉粥样硬化病变的破坏,是1型糖尿病患者死亡的主要原因。最近的小鼠模型为糖尿病中动脉粥样硬化病变起始加速提供了见解,但糖尿病是否直接使更具临床相关性的晚期病变恶化尚不清楚。因此,我们使用一种可随意诱导1型糖尿病的低密度脂蛋白受体缺陷小鼠模型,来研究糖尿病对已存在病变的影响。在诱导糖尿病前,通过给小鼠喂食高脂饮食16周来诱导晚期病变。在另外14周内,给喂食低脂或高脂饮食的小鼠诱导糖尿病,结果发现,糖尿病与病变大小无关,增加了小鼠头臂动脉内的斑块内出血和斑块破裂。高血糖不足以诱导斑块破裂。此外,糖尿病导致S100A9阳性单核细胞(一种心血管事件的促炎生物标志物和巨噬细胞标志物蛋白)的积累增加,而不增加病变巨噬细胞含量。S100A9免疫反应性与斑块内出血相关。主要积极降低富含甘油三酯的脂蛋白可预防糖尿病动脉粥样硬化病变中的斑块破裂和S100A9增加。相反,油酸在体外促进巨噬细胞分化为S100A9阳性群体,从而模拟糖尿病的作用。因此,糖尿病通过一种需要富含甘油三酯的脂蛋白且与S100A9阳性单核细胞积累增加相关的机制,增加斑块破裂,而与对斑块起始的影响无关。这些发现表明糖尿病、斑块破裂和先天免疫系统之间存在重要联系。