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Plasma Cholesterol–Induced Lesion Networks Activated before Regression of Early, Mature, and Advanced Atherosclerosis

Plasma cholesterol lowering (PCL) slows and sometimes prevents progression of atherosclerosis and may even lead to regression. Little is known about how molecular processes in the atherosclerotic arterial wall respond to PCL and modify responses to atherosclerosis regression. We studied atherosclero...

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Autores principales: Björkegren, Johan L. M., Hägg, Sara, Talukdar, Husain A., Foroughi Asl, Hassan, Jain, Rajeev K., Cedergren, Cecilia, Shang, Ming-Mei, Rossignoli, Aránzazu, Takolander, Rabbe, Melander, Olle, Hamsten, Anders, Michoel, Tom, Skogsberg, Josefin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3937269/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24586211
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1004201
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author Björkegren, Johan L. M.
Hägg, Sara
Talukdar, Husain A.
Foroughi Asl, Hassan
Jain, Rajeev K.
Cedergren, Cecilia
Shang, Ming-Mei
Rossignoli, Aránzazu
Takolander, Rabbe
Melander, Olle
Hamsten, Anders
Michoel, Tom
Skogsberg, Josefin
author_facet Björkegren, Johan L. M.
Hägg, Sara
Talukdar, Husain A.
Foroughi Asl, Hassan
Jain, Rajeev K.
Cedergren, Cecilia
Shang, Ming-Mei
Rossignoli, Aránzazu
Takolander, Rabbe
Melander, Olle
Hamsten, Anders
Michoel, Tom
Skogsberg, Josefin
author_sort Björkegren, Johan L. M.
collection PubMed
description Plasma cholesterol lowering (PCL) slows and sometimes prevents progression of atherosclerosis and may even lead to regression. Little is known about how molecular processes in the atherosclerotic arterial wall respond to PCL and modify responses to atherosclerosis regression. We studied atherosclerosis regression and global gene expression responses to PCL (≥80%) and to atherosclerosis regression itself in early, mature, and advanced lesions. In atherosclerotic aortic wall from Ldlr(−/−)Apob (100/100) Mttp (flox/flox)Mx1-Cre mice, atherosclerosis regressed after PCL regardless of lesion stage. However, near-complete regression was observed only in mice with early lesions; mice with mature and advanced lesions were left with regression-resistant, relatively unstable plaque remnants. Atherosclerosis genes responding to PCL before regression, unlike those responding to the regression itself, were enriched in inherited risk for coronary artery disease and myocardial infarction, indicating causality. Inference of transcription factor (TF) regulatory networks of these PCL-responsive gene sets revealed largely different networks in early, mature, and advanced lesions. In early lesions, PPARG was identified as a specific master regulator of the PCL-responsive atherosclerosis TF-regulatory network, whereas in mature and advanced lesions, the specific master regulators were MLL5 and SRSF10/XRN2, respectively. In a THP-1 foam cell model of atherosclerosis regression, siRNA targeting of these master regulators activated the time-point-specific TF-regulatory networks and altered the accumulation of cholesterol esters. We conclude that PCL leads to complete atherosclerosis regression only in mice with early lesions. Identified master regulators and related PCL-responsive TF-regulatory networks will be interesting targets to enhance PCL-mediated regression of mature and advanced atherosclerotic lesions.
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spelling pubmed-39372692014-03-04 Plasma Cholesterol–Induced Lesion Networks Activated before Regression of Early, Mature, and Advanced Atherosclerosis Björkegren, Johan L. M. Hägg, Sara Talukdar, Husain A. Foroughi Asl, Hassan Jain, Rajeev K. Cedergren, Cecilia Shang, Ming-Mei Rossignoli, Aránzazu Takolander, Rabbe Melander, Olle Hamsten, Anders Michoel, Tom Skogsberg, Josefin PLoS Genet Research Article Plasma cholesterol lowering (PCL) slows and sometimes prevents progression of atherosclerosis and may even lead to regression. Little is known about how molecular processes in the atherosclerotic arterial wall respond to PCL and modify responses to atherosclerosis regression. We studied atherosclerosis regression and global gene expression responses to PCL (≥80%) and to atherosclerosis regression itself in early, mature, and advanced lesions. In atherosclerotic aortic wall from Ldlr(−/−)Apob (100/100) Mttp (flox/flox)Mx1-Cre mice, atherosclerosis regressed after PCL regardless of lesion stage. However, near-complete regression was observed only in mice with early lesions; mice with mature and advanced lesions were left with regression-resistant, relatively unstable plaque remnants. Atherosclerosis genes responding to PCL before regression, unlike those responding to the regression itself, were enriched in inherited risk for coronary artery disease and myocardial infarction, indicating causality. Inference of transcription factor (TF) regulatory networks of these PCL-responsive gene sets revealed largely different networks in early, mature, and advanced lesions. In early lesions, PPARG was identified as a specific master regulator of the PCL-responsive atherosclerosis TF-regulatory network, whereas in mature and advanced lesions, the specific master regulators were MLL5 and SRSF10/XRN2, respectively. In a THP-1 foam cell model of atherosclerosis regression, siRNA targeting of these master regulators activated the time-point-specific TF-regulatory networks and altered the accumulation of cholesterol esters. We conclude that PCL leads to complete atherosclerosis regression only in mice with early lesions. Identified master regulators and related PCL-responsive TF-regulatory networks will be interesting targets to enhance PCL-mediated regression of mature and advanced atherosclerotic lesions. Public Library of Science 2014-02-27 /pmc/articles/PMC3937269/ /pubmed/24586211 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1004201 Text en © 2014 Björkegren et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Björkegren, Johan L. M.
Hägg, Sara
Talukdar, Husain A.
Foroughi Asl, Hassan
Jain, Rajeev K.
Cedergren, Cecilia
Shang, Ming-Mei
Rossignoli, Aránzazu
Takolander, Rabbe
Melander, Olle
Hamsten, Anders
Michoel, Tom
Skogsberg, Josefin
Plasma Cholesterol–Induced Lesion Networks Activated before Regression of Early, Mature, and Advanced Atherosclerosis
title Plasma Cholesterol–Induced Lesion Networks Activated before Regression of Early, Mature, and Advanced Atherosclerosis
title_full Plasma Cholesterol–Induced Lesion Networks Activated before Regression of Early, Mature, and Advanced Atherosclerosis
title_fullStr Plasma Cholesterol–Induced Lesion Networks Activated before Regression of Early, Mature, and Advanced Atherosclerosis
title_full_unstemmed Plasma Cholesterol–Induced Lesion Networks Activated before Regression of Early, Mature, and Advanced Atherosclerosis
title_short Plasma Cholesterol–Induced Lesion Networks Activated before Regression of Early, Mature, and Advanced Atherosclerosis
title_sort plasma cholesterol–induced lesion networks activated before regression of early, mature, and advanced atherosclerosis
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3937269/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24586211
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1004201
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