Division of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery, Brigham and Women's Hospital/Harvard Medical School, Boston, Mass.
Division of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery, Brigham and Women's Hospital/Harvard Medical School, Boston, Mass.
J Vasc Surg. 2014 Jun;59(6):1670-6. doi: 10.1016/j.jvs.2013.05.033. Epub 2013 Jul 19.
The heightened inflammatory phenotype associated with obesity has been linked to the development of cardiovascular diseases. Short-term high-fat feeding induces a proinflammatory state that may impact the blood vessel wall. CD11c, a significantly increased dendritic cell biomarker during diet-induced obesity (DIO), may have a mechanistic role in this high-fat feeding effect. We hypothesized that the proinflammatory effect of short-term DIO accelerates vein bypass graft failure via CD11c-dependent mechanisms.
Male 9-week-old DIO mice (n = 13, C57BL/6J recipients; n = 6, CD11c(-/-) recipients) and normal chow controls (n = 15, C57BL/6J recipients; n = 6, CD11c(-/-) recipients) underwent unilateral carotid interposition vein isografting (inferior vena cava from the same diet and genetic background donor), with a midgraft or outflow focal stenosis. Vein grafts were harvested at either 1 week (immunohistochemical staining for early CD11c expression) or 4 weeks later (morphometric analyses and CD11c evaluation).
Despite a 40% larger body size, C57BL/6J DIO mice had 44% smaller poststenosis vein graft lumens (P = .03) than their controls via an acceleration of overall negative vein graft wall remodeling in the day-28 midgraft focal stenosis model but not in the outflow stenosis model. Higher CD11c expression occurred in DIO midgraft-stenosis vein graft walls, both at postoperative days 7 and 28. In contrast, with in vivo CD11c deficiency, DIO did not elicit this poststenotic negative remodeling but attenuated intimal hyperplasia.
These findings highlight negative wall remodeling as a potential factor leading to vein graft failure and provide direct evidence that short-term dietary alterations in the mammalian metabolic milieu can have lasting implications related to acute vascular interventions. DIO induces negative mouse vein graft wall remodeling via CD11c-depedent pathways.
与肥胖相关的炎症表型增加与心血管疾病的发展有关。短期高脂肪喂养会引起促炎状态,可能影响血管壁。在饮食诱导的肥胖(DIO)期间,CD11c 是一种显著增加的树突状细胞生物标志物,它可能在这种高脂肪喂养效应中具有机制作用。我们假设,短期 DIO 的促炎作用通过 CD11c 依赖性机制加速静脉旁路移植失败。
雄性 9 周龄 DIO 小鼠(n = 13,C57BL/6J 受体;n = 6,CD11c(-/-)受体)和正常饮食对照(n = 15,C57BL/6J 受体;n = 6,CD11c(-/-)受体)接受单侧颈动脉间置静脉同种异体移植(来自同一饮食和遗传背景供体的下腔静脉),中移植段或流出段有局灶性狭窄。静脉移植物分别在 1 周(早期 CD11c 表达的免疫组织化学染色)或 4 周后(形态计量分析和 CD11c 评估)收获。
尽管 C57BL/6J DIO 小鼠的体重增加了 40%,但通过加速第 28 天中移植段局灶性狭窄模型中的整体静脉移植物壁负性重塑,其术后狭窄段静脉移植物管腔缩小了 44%(P =.03),而流出段狭窄模型中则没有。在 DIO 中移植段狭窄的静脉移植物壁中,CD11c 的表达在术后第 7 天和第 28 天都更高。相比之下,体内 CD11c 缺乏时,DIO 不会引起这种术后负性重塑,但会减弱内膜增生。
这些发现强调了负性壁重塑是导致静脉移植物失败的潜在因素,并提供了直接证据,表明哺乳动物代谢环境中的短期饮食改变可能与急性血管干预有关。DIO 通过 CD11c 依赖途径诱导小鼠静脉移植物壁负性重塑。