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Tie1 attenuation reduces murine atherosclerosis in a dose-dependent and shear stress–specific manner
Kel Vin Woo, … , Sergio Fazio, H. Scott Baldwin
Kel Vin Woo, … , Sergio Fazio, H. Scott Baldwin
Published March 7, 2011
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2011;121(4):1624-1635. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI42040.
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Research Article Cardiology Article has an altmetric score of 5

Tie1 attenuation reduces murine atherosclerosis in a dose-dependent and shear stress–specific manner

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Abstract

Although the response of endothelial cells to the disturbed blood flow in the vicinity of atherosclerotic lesions is known to be distinct from that elicited by nonatherogenic laminar flow, the mechanisms involved are poorly understood. Our initial studies confirmed that expression of the endothelial receptor tyrosine kinase Tie1 was evident at regions of atherogenic flow in mature animals. We therefore hypothesized that Tie1 plays a role in the endothelial response to atherogenic shear stress. Consistent with this, we found that Tie1+/– mice bred to the apoE-deficient background displayed a 35% reduction in atherosclerosis relative to Tie1+/+;Apoe–/– mice. Since deletion of Tie1 results in embryonic lethality secondary to vascular dysfunction, we used conditional and inducible mutagenesis to study the effect of endothelial-specific Tie1 attenuation on atherogenesis in Apoe–/– mice and found a dose-dependent decrease in atherosclerotic lesions. Analysis of primary aortic endothelial cells indicated that atheroprotective laminar flow decreased Tie1 expression in vitro. Attenuation of Tie1 was associated with an increase in eNOS expression and Tie2 phosphorylation. In addition, Tie1 attenuation increased IkBα expression while decreasing ICAM levels. In summary, we have found that shear stress conditions that modulate atherogenic events also regulate Tie1 expression. Therefore, Tie1 may play a novel proinflammatory role in atherosclerosis.

Authors

Kel Vin Woo, Xianghu Qu, Vladimir R. Babaev, MacRae F. Linton, Raul J. Guzman, Sergio Fazio, H. Scott Baldwin

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Figure 2

Tie1 promoter activity is downregulated by laminar flow with increased shear stress.

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Tie1 promoter activity is downregulated by laminar flow with increased s...
(A) Tapered and nontapered control casts that were surgically implanted in mouse carotid arteries. Scale bar: 1 mm. (B) Illustration of tapered casts manipulating in vivo shear stress, inducing lowered shear stress upstream, increased shear stress inside, and oscillatory flow with shear stress immediately downstream of the cast. Control nontapered casts do not interfere with in vivo shear stress. (C and D) Representative whole-mount X-gal–stained Tie1-LacZ mouse carotid arteries with shear stress–modifying casts 7 days after implantation. (C) Tapered cast showed diminished X-gal staining along the region of increased shear stress inside the cast. (D) Control nontapered casts demonstrated persistent uniform X-gal staining. RCCA, right common carotid artery; LCA, left carotid artery; Ao arch, aortic arch. Original magnification, ×50.

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