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on June 1, 2009

Circulation. 2009
Published online before print June 1, 2009, doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.108.808618
A more recent version of this article appeared on June 16, 2009
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Submitted on July 22, 2008
Accepted on April 14, 2009

Heme Oxygenase 1 Determines Atherosclerotic Lesion Progression Into a Vulnerable Plaque

Caroline Cheng PhD, Annemarie M. Noordeloos MSc, Viktoria Jeney MSc, Miguel P. Soares PhD, Frans Moll PhD, MD, Gerard Pasterkamp PhD, MD, Patrick W. Serruys PhD, MD, and Henricus J. Duckers PhD, MD*

From the Molecular Cardiology Laboratory, Experimental Cardiology, Thoraxcenter, Erasmus University Medical Center Rotterdam, Rotterdam, Netherlands (C.C., A.M.N., P.W.S., H.J.D.); Departments of Vascular Surgery (F.M.) and Cardiology (G.P.), University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht, the Netherlands; and Inflammation Laboratory, Instituto Gulbenkian de Ciencia, Oeiras, Portugal (V.J., M.P.S.).

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: h.duckers{at}erasmusmc.nl.

Background—The molecular regulation for the transition from stable to vulnerable plaque remains to be elucidated. Heme oxygenase 1 (HO-1) and its metabolites have been implicated in the cytoprotective defense against oxidative injury in atherogenesis. In this study, we sought to assess the role of HO-1 in the progression toward plaque instability in carotid artery disease in patients and in a murine model of vulnerable plaque development.

Methods and Results—Atherectomy biopsy from 112 patients with clinical carotid artery disease was collected and stratified according to characteristics of plaque vulnerability. HO-1 expression correlated closely with features of vulnerable human atheromatous plaque (P<0.005), including macrophage and lipid accumulation, and was inversely correlated with intraplaque vascular smooth muscle cells and collagen deposition. HO-1 expression levels correlated with the plaque destabilizing factors matrix metalloproteinase-9, interleukin-8, and interleukin-6. Likewise, in a vulnerable plaque model using apolipoprotein E-/- mice, HO-1 expression was upregulated in vulnerable versus stable lesions. HO-1 induction by cobalt protoporphyrin impeded lesion progression into vulnerable plaques, indicated by a reduction in necrotic core size and intraplaque lipid accumulation, whereas cap thickness and vascular smooth muscle cells were increased. In contrast, inhibition of HO-1 by zinc protoporphyrin augmented plaque vulnerability. Plaque stabilizing was prominent after adenoviral transduction of HO-1 compared with sham virus–treated animals, providing proof that the observed effects on plaque vulnerability were HO-1 specific.

Conclusions—Here we demonstrate in a well-defined patient group and a murine vulnerable plaque model that HO-1 induction reverses plaque progression from a vulnerable plaque to a more stable phenotype as part of a compensatory atheroprotective response.


Key words: atherosclerosis • coronary disease • inflammation • genes • vasculature


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Circulation 2009 119: 2963-2964. [Extract] [Full Text]