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Divergent JAM-C Expression Accelerates Monocyte-Derived Cell Exit from Atherosclerotic Plaques

Atherosclerosis, caused in part by monocytes in plaques, continues to be a disease that afflicts the modern world. Whilst significant steps have been made in treating this chronic inflammatory disease, questions remain on how to prevent monocyte and macrophage accumulation in atherosclerotic plaques...

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Autores principales: Bradfield, Paul F., Menon, Arjun, Miljkovic-Licina, Marijana, Lee, Boris P., Fischer, Nicolas, Fish, Richard J., Kwak, Brenda, Fisher, Edward A., Imhof, Beat A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4956249/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27442505
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0159679
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author Bradfield, Paul F.
Menon, Arjun
Miljkovic-Licina, Marijana
Lee, Boris P.
Fischer, Nicolas
Fish, Richard J.
Kwak, Brenda
Fisher, Edward A.
Imhof, Beat A.
author_facet Bradfield, Paul F.
Menon, Arjun
Miljkovic-Licina, Marijana
Lee, Boris P.
Fischer, Nicolas
Fish, Richard J.
Kwak, Brenda
Fisher, Edward A.
Imhof, Beat A.
author_sort Bradfield, Paul F.
collection PubMed
description Atherosclerosis, caused in part by monocytes in plaques, continues to be a disease that afflicts the modern world. Whilst significant steps have been made in treating this chronic inflammatory disease, questions remain on how to prevent monocyte and macrophage accumulation in atherosclerotic plaques. Junctional Adhesion Molecule C (JAM-C) expressed by vascular endothelium directs monocyte transendothelial migration in a unidirectional manner leading to increased inflammation. Here we show that interfering with JAM-C allows reverse-transendothelial migration of monocyte-derived cells, opening the way back out of the inflamed environment. To study the role of JAM-C in plaque regression we used a mouse model of atherosclerosis, and tested the impact of vascular JAM-C expression levels on monocyte reverse transendothelial migration using human cells. Studies in-vitro under inflammatory conditions revealed that overexpression or gene silencing of JAM-C in human endothelium exposed to flow resulted in higher rates of monocyte reverse-transendothelial migration, similar to antibody blockade. We then transplanted atherosclerotic, plaque-containing aortic arches from hyperlipidemic ApoE(-/-) mice into wild-type normolipidemic recipient mice. JAM-C blockade in the recipients induced greater emigration of monocyte-derived cells and further diminished the size of atherosclerotic plaques. Our findings have shown that JAM-C forms a one-way vascular barrier for leukocyte transendothelial migration only when present at homeostatic copy numbers. We have also shown that blocking JAM-C can reduce the number of atherogenic monocytes/macrophages in plaques by emigration, providing a novel therapeutic strategy for chronic inflammatory pathologies.
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spelling pubmed-49562492016-08-08 Divergent JAM-C Expression Accelerates Monocyte-Derived Cell Exit from Atherosclerotic Plaques Bradfield, Paul F. Menon, Arjun Miljkovic-Licina, Marijana Lee, Boris P. Fischer, Nicolas Fish, Richard J. Kwak, Brenda Fisher, Edward A. Imhof, Beat A. PLoS One Research Article Atherosclerosis, caused in part by monocytes in plaques, continues to be a disease that afflicts the modern world. Whilst significant steps have been made in treating this chronic inflammatory disease, questions remain on how to prevent monocyte and macrophage accumulation in atherosclerotic plaques. Junctional Adhesion Molecule C (JAM-C) expressed by vascular endothelium directs monocyte transendothelial migration in a unidirectional manner leading to increased inflammation. Here we show that interfering with JAM-C allows reverse-transendothelial migration of monocyte-derived cells, opening the way back out of the inflamed environment. To study the role of JAM-C in plaque regression we used a mouse model of atherosclerosis, and tested the impact of vascular JAM-C expression levels on monocyte reverse transendothelial migration using human cells. Studies in-vitro under inflammatory conditions revealed that overexpression or gene silencing of JAM-C in human endothelium exposed to flow resulted in higher rates of monocyte reverse-transendothelial migration, similar to antibody blockade. We then transplanted atherosclerotic, plaque-containing aortic arches from hyperlipidemic ApoE(-/-) mice into wild-type normolipidemic recipient mice. JAM-C blockade in the recipients induced greater emigration of monocyte-derived cells and further diminished the size of atherosclerotic plaques. Our findings have shown that JAM-C forms a one-way vascular barrier for leukocyte transendothelial migration only when present at homeostatic copy numbers. We have also shown that blocking JAM-C can reduce the number of atherogenic monocytes/macrophages in plaques by emigration, providing a novel therapeutic strategy for chronic inflammatory pathologies. Public Library of Science 2016-07-21 /pmc/articles/PMC4956249/ /pubmed/27442505 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0159679 Text en © 2016 Bradfield 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Bradfield, Paul F.
Menon, Arjun
Miljkovic-Licina, Marijana
Lee, Boris P.
Fischer, Nicolas
Fish, Richard J.
Kwak, Brenda
Fisher, Edward A.
Imhof, Beat A.
Divergent JAM-C Expression Accelerates Monocyte-Derived Cell Exit from Atherosclerotic Plaques
title Divergent JAM-C Expression Accelerates Monocyte-Derived Cell Exit from Atherosclerotic Plaques
title_full Divergent JAM-C Expression Accelerates Monocyte-Derived Cell Exit from Atherosclerotic Plaques
title_fullStr Divergent JAM-C Expression Accelerates Monocyte-Derived Cell Exit from Atherosclerotic Plaques
title_full_unstemmed Divergent JAM-C Expression Accelerates Monocyte-Derived Cell Exit from Atherosclerotic Plaques
title_short Divergent JAM-C Expression Accelerates Monocyte-Derived Cell Exit from Atherosclerotic Plaques
title_sort divergent jam-c expression accelerates monocyte-derived cell exit from atherosclerotic plaques
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4956249/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27442505
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0159679
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