Bird D A, Tangirala R K, Fruebis J, Steinberg D, Witztum J L, Palinski W
Department of Medicine, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla 92093-0682, USA.
J Lipid Res. 1998 May;39(5):1079-90.
Probucol is a powerful inhibitor of atherosclerosis in a number of animal models. However, it is unknown whether this is due to the strong antioxidant protection of low density lipoprotein (LDL), to antioxidant effects in the artery wall, or to cellular effects not shared by other antioxidants. To investigate whether murine models are suitable to study the antiatherogenic mechanisms of probucol, three experiments following different protocols were carried out in 135 male and female LDL receptor-deficient (LDLR-/-) mice. Treatment groups received a high (0.5%) or low (0.025%) dose of probucol, or low-dose probucol plus a high dose (0.1%) of vitamin E for periods ranging from 6 to 26 weeks. In all experiments, probucol strongly protected LDL against ex vivo oxidation (lag times exceeding 1400 min in 0.5% probucol-treated mice). Treatment with 0.5% probucol significantly lowered both HDL-cholesterol and plasma apolipoprotein (apo)A-I concentrations. In all three experiments, treatment with 0.5% probucol consistently increased the size of lesions in the aortic origin, from 1.3-fold (n.s.) to 2.9-fold (P < 0.05) in female mice and from 3.6- to 3.7-fold in males (P < 0.001). Even treatment with 0.025% probucol increased atherosclerosis 1.6-fold in male mice (P < 0.01). Addition of the high dose of vitamin E did not attenuate the pro-atherogenic effect of 0.025% probucol. In conclusion, probucol not only failed to decrease but actively increased atherogenesis in LDLR-/- mice in a dose-dependent manner, even though it provided a very strong antioxidant protection of LDL. This suggests that the reduction of atherosclerosis observed in other animal models is due to intracellular effects of probucol not found in mice, to differences in the metabolism of probucol, and/or to an overriding atherogenic effect of the decrease in HDL in murine models.
普罗布考在多种动物模型中是一种强效的动脉粥样硬化抑制剂。然而,尚不清楚这是由于其对低密度脂蛋白(LDL)具有强大的抗氧化保护作用、对动脉壁的抗氧化作用,还是由于其他抗氧化剂所没有的细胞效应。为了研究小鼠模型是否适合用于研究普罗布考的抗动脉粥样硬化机制,我们对135只雄性和雌性低密度脂蛋白受体缺陷(LDLR-/-)小鼠按照不同方案进行了三项实验。治疗组接受高剂量(0.5%)或低剂量(0.025%)的普罗布考,或低剂量普罗布考加高剂量(0.1%)的维生素E,治疗时间为6至26周。在所有实验中,普罗布考都能强烈保护LDL免受体外氧化(在接受0.5%普罗布考治疗的小鼠中,滞后时间超过1400分钟)。用0.5%普罗布考治疗可显著降低高密度脂蛋白胆固醇和血浆载脂蛋白(apo)A-I浓度。在所有三项实验中,用0.5%普罗布考治疗均使雌性小鼠主动脉起始处病变大小持续增加,从1.3倍(无统计学意义)增加到2.9倍(P<0.05),雄性小鼠从3.6倍增加到3.7倍(P<0.001)。即使使用0.025%普罗布考治疗也使雄性小鼠的动脉粥样硬化增加了1.6倍(P<0.01)。添加高剂量的维生素E并不能减弱0.025%普罗布考的促动脉粥样硬化作用。总之,普罗布考不仅未能降低LDLR-/-小鼠的动脉粥样硬化,反而以剂量依赖的方式使其显著增加,尽管它对LDL提供了非常强的抗氧化保护。这表明在其他动物模型中观察到的动脉粥样硬化减轻是由于普罗布考在小鼠中未发现的细胞内效应、普罗布考代谢的差异,和/或小鼠模型中高密度脂蛋白降低的主要促动脉粥样硬化作用。