Macrophage-specific IGF-1 overexpression reduces CXCL12 chemokine levels and suppresses atherosclerotic burden in apoe-deficient mice
P Snarski, S Sukhanov, T Yoshida… - … , and vascular biology, 2022 - ahajournals.org
Arteriosclerosis, thrombosis, and vascular biology, 2022•ahajournals.org
Objective: IGF-1 (insulin-like growth factor 1) exerts pleiotropic effects including promotion of
cellular growth, differentiation, survival, and anabolism. We have shown that systemic IGF-1
administration reduced atherosclerosis in Apoe−/−(apolipoprotein E deficient) mice, and this
effect was associated with a reduction in lesional macrophages and a decreased number of
foam cells in the plaque. Almost all cell types secrete IGF-1, but the effect of macrophage-
derived IGF-1 on the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis is poorly understood. We …
cellular growth, differentiation, survival, and anabolism. We have shown that systemic IGF-1
administration reduced atherosclerosis in Apoe−/−(apolipoprotein E deficient) mice, and this
effect was associated with a reduction in lesional macrophages and a decreased number of
foam cells in the plaque. Almost all cell types secrete IGF-1, but the effect of macrophage-
derived IGF-1 on the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis is poorly understood. We …
Objective
IGF-1 (insulin-like growth factor 1) exerts pleiotropic effects including promotion of cellular growth, differentiation, survival, and anabolism. We have shown that systemic IGF-1 administration reduced atherosclerosis in Apoe−/− (apolipoprotein E deficient) mice, and this effect was associated with a reduction in lesional macrophages and a decreased number of foam cells in the plaque. Almost all cell types secrete IGF-1, but the effect of macrophage-derived IGF-1 on the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis is poorly understood. We hypothesized that macrophage-derived IGF-1 will reduce atherosclerosis.
Approach and Results
We created macrophage-specific IGF-1 overexpressing mice on an Apoe−/− background. Macrophage-specific IGF-1 overexpression reduced plaque macrophages, foam cells, and atherosclerotic burden and promoted features of stable atherosclerotic plaque. Macrophage-specific IGF1 mice had a reduction in monocyte infiltration into plaque, decreased expression of CXCL12 (CXC chemokine ligand 12), and upregulation of ABCA1 (ATP-binding cassette transporter 1), a cholesterol efflux regulator, in atherosclerotic plaque and in peritoneal macrophages. IGF-1 prevented oxidized lipid-induced CXCL12 upregulation and foam cell formation in cultured THP-1 macrophages and increased lipid efflux. We also found an increase in cholesterol efflux in macrophage-specific IGF1–derived peritoneal macrophages.
Conclusions
Macrophage IGF-1 overexpression reduced atherosclerotic burden and increased features of plaque stability, likely via a reduction in CXCL12-mediated monocyte recruitment and an increase in ABCA1-dependent macrophage lipid efflux.
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