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Role of Hypoxia-Inducible Factor (HIF) 1α in Dendritic Cells in Immune Regulation of Atherosclerosis
(2013)
Atherosclerosis is the underlying cause of cardiovascular diseases and a major threat to human health worldwide. It involves not only accumulation of lipids in the vessel wall but a chronic inflammatory response mediated by highly specific cellular and molecular responses. Macrophages and dendritic cells (DCs) play an essential role in taking up modified lipids and presenting them to T and B lymphocytes, which promote the immune response. Enhanced activation, migration and accumulation of inflammatory cells at the local site leads to formation of atherosclerotic plaques.
Atherosclerotic plaques become hypoxic due to reduced oxygen diffusion and high metabolic demand of accumulated cells. The various immune cells experience hypoxic conditions locally and inflammatory stimuli systemically, thus up-regulating Hypoxia-inducible factor 1α. Though the role of HIF1α in macrophages and lymphocytes has been elucidated, its role in DCs still remains controversial, especially with respect to atherosclerosis. In this project work, the role of HIF1α in DCs was investigated by using a cell specific knockout mouse model where HIF1α was deleted in CD11c+ cells.
Aortic root sections from atherosclerotic mice showed presence of hypoxia and up-regulation of HIF1α which co-localized with CD11c+ cells. Atherosclerotic splenic DCs also displayed enhanced expression of HIF1α, proving non-hypoxic stimulation of HIF1α due to systemic inflammation. Conditional knockout (CKO) mice lacking HIF1α in CD11c+ cells, under baseline conditions did not show changes in immune responses suggesting effects of HIF1α only under inflammatory conditions. When these mice were crossed to the Ldlr-/- line and placed on 8 weeks of high fat diet, they developed enhanced plaques with higher T-cell infiltration as compared to the wild-type (WT) controls. The plaques were of a complex phenotype, defined by increased percent of smooth muscle cells (SMCs) and necrotic core area and reduced percent of macrophages and DCs. The mice also displayed enhanced T-cell activation and a Th1 bias in the periphery.
The CKO DCs themselves exhibited increased expression of IL 12 and a higher capacity to proliferate and polarize naive T cells to the Th1 phenotype in vitro. The DCs also showed decreased expression of STAT3, in line with the inhibitory effects of STAT3 on DC activation seen in previous studies. When STAT3 was overexpressed in DCs in vitro, IL 12 was down-regulated, but its expression increased significantly on STAT3 inhibition using a mutant vector. In addition, when STAT3 was overexpressed in DCs in vivo using a Cre regulated lentiviral system, the mice showed decreased plaque formation compared to controls. Interestingly, the effects of STAT3 modulation were similar in WT and CKO mice, intending that STAT3 lies downstream of HIF1α. Finally, using a chromatin immunoprecipitation assay (ChIP), it was confirmed that HIF1α binds to hypoxia responsive elements (HREs) in the Stat3 gene promoter thus regulating its expression. When DCs lack HIF1α, STAT3 expression is not stimulated and hence IL 12 production by DCs is uninhibited. This excessive IL 12 can activate naive T cells and polarize them to the Th1 phenotype, thereby enhancing atherosclerotic plaque progression.
This project thus concludes that HIF1α restrains DC activation via STAT3 generation and prevents excessive production of IL 12 that helps to keep inflammation and atherosclerosis under check.
Platelets are small anucleate cell fragments derived from bone marrow megakaryocytes (MKs) and are important players in hemostasis and thrombosis. Platelet granules store factors which are released upon activation. There are three major types of platelet granules: alpha-granules, dense granules and lysosomes. While dense granules contain non-proteinacious factors which support platelet aggregation and adhesion, platelet alpha-granules contain more than 300 different proteins involved in various functions such as inflammation, wound healing and the maintenanceof vascular integrity, however, their functional significance in vivo remains unknown. This thesis summarizes analyses using three mouse models generated to investigate the role of platelet granules in thrombosis, hemostasis, stroke and inflammation.
Unc13d-/- mice displayed defective platelet dense granule secretion, which resulted in abrogated thrombosis and hemostasis. Remarkably, Munc13-4-deficient mice were profoundly protected from infarct progression following transient middle cerebral artery occlusion (tMCAO) and this was not associated with increased intracranial bleeding indicating an essential involvementof dense granule secretion in infarct progression but not intracranial hemostasis during acute stroke with obvious therapeutic implications.
In the second part of this thesis, the role of platelet alpha-granules was investigated using the Nbeal2-/- mouse. Mutations in NBEAL2 have been linked to the gray platelet syndrome (GPS), a rare inherited bleeding disorder. Nbeal2-/- mice displayed the characteristics of human GPS, with defective alpha-granule biogenesis in MKs and their absence from platelets. Nbeal2-deficiency did not affect MK differentiation and proplatelet formation in vitro or platelet life span in vivo. Nbeal2-/- platelets displayed impaired adhesion, aggregation, and coagulant activity ex vivo that translated into defective arterial thrombus formation and protection from thrombo-inflammatory brain infarction in vivo. In a model of skin wound repair, Nbeal2-/- mice exhibited impaired development of functional granulation tissue due to severely reduced differentiation of myofibroblasts.
In the third part, the effects of combined deficiency of alpha- and dense granule secretion were analyzed using Unc13d-/-/Nbeal2-/- mice. Platelets of these mice showed impaired aggregation and adhesion to collagen under flow ex vivo, which translated into infinite tail bleeding times and severely defective arterial thrombus formation in vivo. When subjected to in vivo models of skin or lung inflammation, the double mutant mice showed no signs of hemorrhage. In contrast, lack of platelet granule release resulted in impaired vascular integrity in the ischemic brain following tMCAO leading to increased mortality. This indicates that while defective dense granule secretion or the paucity of alpha-granules alone have no effect on vascular integrity after stroke, the combination of both impairs vascular integrity and causes an increase in mortality.
Pneumolysin, a protein toxin, represents one of the major virulence factors of Streptococcus pneumoniae. This pathogen causes bacterial meningitis with especially high disease rates in young children, elderly people and immunosuppressed patients. The protein toxin belongs to the family of cholesterol-dependent cytolysins, which require membrane cholesterol in order to bind and to be activated. Upon activation, monomers assemble in a circle and undergo conformational change. This conformational change leads to the formation of a pore, which eventually leads to cell lysis. This knowledge was obtained by studies that used a higher concentration compared to the concentration of pneumolysin found in the cerebrospinal fluid of meningitis patients. Thus, a much lower concentration of pneumolysin was used in this work in order to investigate effects of this toxin on primary mouse astrocytes. Previously, a small GTPase activation, possibly leading to cytoskeletal changes, was found in a human neuroblastoma cell line. This led to the hypothesis that pneumolysin can lead to similar cytoskeletal changes in primary cells. The aim of this work was to investigate and characterise the effects of pneumolysin on primary mouse astrocytes in terms of a possible pore formation, cellular trafficking and immunological responses. Firstly, the importance of pore-formation on cytoskeletal changes was to be investigated. In order to tackle this question, wild-type pneumolysin and two mutant variants were used. One variant was generated by exchanging one amino acid in the cholesterol recognising region, the second variant was generated by deleting two amino acids in a protein domain that is essential for oligomerisation. These variants should be incapable of forming a pore and were compared to the wild-type in terms of lytic capacities, membrane binding, membrane depolarisation, pore-formation in artificial membranes (planar lipid bilayer) and effects on the cytoskeleton. These investigations resulted in the finding that the pore-formation is required for inducing cell lysis, membrane depolarisation and cytoskeletal changes in astrocytes. The variants were not able to form a pore in planar lipid bilayer and did not cause cell lysis and membrane depolarisation. However, they bound to the cell membrane to the same extent as the wild-type toxin. Thus, the pore-formation, but not the membrane binding was the cause for these changes. Secondly, the effect of pneumolysin on cellular trafficking was investigated. Here, the variants showed no effect, but the wild-type led to an increase in overall endocytotic events and was itself internalised into the cell. In order to characterise a possible mechanism for internalisation, a GFP-tagged version of pneumolysin was used. Several fluorescence-labelled markers for different endocytotic pathways were used in a co-staining approach with pneumolysin. Furthermore, inhibitors for two key-players in classical endocytotic pathways, dynamin and myosin II, were used in order to investigate classical endocytotic pathways and their possible involvement in toxin internalisation. The second finding of this work is that pneumolysin is taken up into the cell via dynamin- and caveolin-independent pinocytosis, which could transfer the toxin to caveosomes. From there, the fate of the toxin remains unknown. Additionally, pneumolysin leads to an overall increase in endocytotic events. This observation led to the third aim of this work. If the toxin increases the overall rate of endocytosis, the question arises whether toxin internalisation favours bacterial tissue penetration of the host or whether it serves as a defence mechanism of the cell in order to degrade the protein. Thus, several proinflammatory cytokines were investigated, as previous studies describe an effect of pneumolysin on cytokine production. Surprisingly, only interleukin 6-production was increased after toxin-treatment and no effect of endocytotic inhibitors on the interleukin 6-production was observed. The conclusion from this finding is that pneumolysin leads to an increase of interleukin 6, which would not depend on the endocytotic uptake of pneumolysin. The production of interleukin 6 would enhance the production of acute phase proteins, T-cell activation, growth and differentiation. On the one hand, this activation could serve pathogen clearance from infected tissue. On the other hand, the production of interleukin 6 could promote a further penetration of pathogen into host tissue. This question should be further investigated.
Traditionally, ischemic stroke has been regarded as the mere consequence of cessation of cerebral blood flow, e.g. due to the thromboembolic occlusion of a major brain supplying vessel. However, the simple restoration of blood flow via thrombolysis and/or mechanical recanalization alone often does not guarantee a good functional outcome. It appears that secondary detrimental processes are triggered by hypoxia and reoxygenation, which are referred to as ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury. During recent years it became evident that, beside thrombosis inflammation and edema formation are key players in the pathophysiology of cerebral ischemia. The contact-kinin system represents an interface between thrombotic, inflammatory and edematous circuits. It connects the intrinsic coagulation pathway with the plasma kallikrein-kinin system (KKS) via coagulation factor FXII.
The serine protease inhibitor C1-inhibitor (C1-INH) has a wide spectrum of inhibitory activities and counteracts activation of the contact-kinin system at multiple levels. The first part of the thesis aimed to multimodally interfere with infarct development by C1-INH and to analyze modes of actions of human plasma derived C1-INH Berinert® P in a murine model of focal cerebral ischemia. It was shown that C57BL/6 mice following early application of 15.0 units (U) C1-INH, but not 7.5 U developed reduced brain infarctions by ~60% and less neurological deficits in the model of transient occlusion of the middle cerebral artery (tMCAO). This protective effect was preserved at more advanced stages of infarction (day 7), without increasing the risk of intracerebral bleeding or affecting normal hemostasis. Less neurological deficits could also be observed with delayed C1-INH treatment, whereas no improvement was achieved in the model of permanent MCAO (pMCAO). Blood-brain-barrier (BBB) damage, inflammation and thrombosis were significantly improved following 15.0 U C1-INH application early after onset of ischemia. Based on its strong antiedematous, antiinflammatory and antithrombotic properties C1-INH constitutes a multifaceted therapeutic compound that protects from ischemic neurodegeneration in ‘clinically meaningful’ settings.
The second part of the thesis addresses the still elusive functional role of macrophages in the early phase of stroke, especially the role of the macrophage-specific adhesion molecule sialoadhesin (Sn). For the first time, sialoadhesin null (Sn-/-) mice, homozygous deficient for Sn on macrophages were subjected to tMCAO to assess the clinical outcome. Neurological and motor function was significantly improved in Sn-/- mice on day 1 after ischemic stroke compared with wildtype (Sn+/+) animals. These clinical improvements were clearly detectable even on day 3 following tMCAO. Infarctions on day 1 were roughly the same size as in Sn+/+ mice and did not grow until day 3. No intracerebral bleeding could be detected at any time point of data acquisition. Twenty four hours after ischemia a strong induction of Sn was detectable in Sn+/+ mice, which was previously observed only on perivascular macrophages in the normal brain. Deletion of Sn on macrophages resulted in less disturbance of the BBB and a reduced number of CD11b+ (specific marker for macrophages/microglia) cells, which, however, was not associated with altered expression levels of inflammatory cytokines. To further analyze the function of macrophages following stroke this thesis took advantage of LysM-Cre+/-/IKK2-/- mice bearing a nuclear factor (NF)-ϰB activation defect in the myeloid lineage, including macrophages. Consequently, macrophages were not able to synthesize inflammatory cytokines under the control of NF-ϰB. Surprisingly, infarct sizes and neurological deficits upon tMCAO were roughly the same in conditional knockout mice and respective wildtype littermates. These findings provide evidence that macrophages do not contribute to tissue damage and neurological deficits, at least, not by release of inflammatory cytokines in the early phase of cerebral ischemia. In contrast, Sn which is initially expressed on perivascular macrophages and upregulated on macrophages/microglia within the parenchyma following stroke, influenced functional outcome.
Chronic pain conditions are a major reason for the utilization of the health care system. Inflammatory pain states can persist facilitated by peripheral sensitization of nociceptors. The voltage-gated sodium channel 1.9 (NaV1.9) is an important regulator of neuronal excitability and is involved in inflammation-induced pain hypersensitivity. Recently, oxidized 1-palmitoyl-2-arachidonoyl-sn-glycerol-3-phosphatidylcholine (OxPAPC) was identified as a mediator of acute inflammatory pain and persistent hyperalgesia, suggesting an involvement in proalgesic cascades and peripheral sensitization. Peripheral sensitization implies an increase in neuronal excitability. This thesis aims to characterize spontaneous calcium activity in neuronal compartments as a proxy to investigate neuronal excitability, making use of the computational tool Neural Activity Cubic (NA3). NA3 allows automated calcium activity event detection of signal-close-to-noise calcium activity and evaluation of neuronal activity states. Additionally, the influence of OxPAPC and NaV1.9 on the excitability of murine dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons and the effect of OxPAPC on the response of DRG neurons towards other inflammatory mediators (prostaglandin E2, histamine, and bradykinin) is investigated. Using calcium imaging, the presence of spontaneous calcium activity in murine DRG neurons was established. NA3 was used to quantify this spontaneous calcium activity, which revealed decreased activity counts in axons and somata of NaV1.9 knockout (KO) neurons compared to wildtype (WT). Incubation of WT DRG neurons with OxPAPC before calcium imaging did not show altered activity counts compared to controls. OxPAPC incubation also did not modify the response of DRG neurons treated with inflammatory mediators. However, the variance ratio computed by NA3 conclusively allowed to determine neuronal activity states. In conclusion, my findings indicate an important function of NaV1.9 in determining the neuronal excitability of DRG neurons in resting states. OxPAPC exposition does not influence neuronal excitability nor sensitizes neurons for other inflammatory mediators. This evidence reduces the primary mechanism of OxPAPC-induced hyperalgesia to acute effects. Importantly, it was possible to establish an approach for unbiased excitability quantification of DRG neurons by calcium activity event detection and calcium trace variance analysis by NA3. It was possible to show that signal-close-to-noise calcium activity reflects neuronal excitability states.
Hereditary spastic paraplegias (HSPs) are genetically-determined, neurodegenerative disorders characterized by progressive weakness and spasticity of the lower limbs. Spastic paraplegia type 11 (SPG11) is a complicated form of HSP, which is caused by mutations in the SPG11 gene encoding spatacsin, a protein possibly involved in lysosomal reformation. Based on our previous studies demonstrating that secondary neuroinflammation can be a robust amplifier of various genetically-mediated diseases of both the central and peripheral nervous system, we here test the possibility that neuroinflammation may modify the disease outcome also in a mouse model for SPG11. Spg11-knockout (Spg11-/-) mice develop early walking pattern and behavioral abnormalities, at least partially reflecting motor, and behavioral changes typical for patients. Furthermore, we detected a progressive increase in axonal damage and axonal spheroid formation in the white and grey matter compartments of the central nervous system of Spg11-/- mice. This was accompanied by a concomitant substantial increase of secondary inflammation by cytotoxic CD8+ and CD4+ T-lymphocytes. We here provide evidence that disease-related changes can be ameliorated/delayed by the genetic deletion of the adaptive immune system. Accordingly, we provide evidence that repurposing clinically approved immunomodulators (fingolimod/FTY720 or teriflunomide), that are in use for treatment of multiple sclerosis (MS), also improve disease symptoms in mice, when administered in an early (before neural damage) or late (after/during neural damage) treatment regime.
This work provides strong evidence that immunomodulation can be a therapeutic option for the still untreatable SPG11, including its typical neuropsychological features. This poses the question if inflammation is not only a disease amplifier in SPG11 but can act as a unifying factor also for other genetically mediated disorders of the CNS. If true, this may pave the way to therapeutic options in a wide range of still untreatable, primarily genetic, neurological disorders by repurposing approved immunomodulators.
Das Empfinden von Schmerz ist für uns überlebenswichtig. Chronischer Schmerz hingegen hat seine physiologische Bedeutung verloren und wird als eigenes Krankheitsbild angesehen. Schmerzempfindung beginnt mit der Nozizeption. Die Zellkörper nozizeptiver Neurone befinden sich in den Spinalganglien (Hinterwurzelganglion, dorsal root ganglion DRG) und Trigeminalganglien (TG). In den DRG-Neuronen macht der Zwei-Poren-Kaliumkanal (K2P) TRESK die Hauptkomponente eines Kaliumstromes, des „standing outward currents“ IKSO, aus. Die physiologische Hauptaufgabe der TRESK-Kanäle liegt in der Regulation der zellulären Erregbarkeit nozizeptiver Neurone. Während einer Entzündungsreaktion werden Entzündungsmediatoren wie Histamin, Bradykinin, Serotonin und Lysophosphatidsäure (LPA) ausgeschüttet und können durch die Aktivierung ihrer G-Protein gekoppelten Rezeptoren (GPCR) oder direkte Interaktion mit Ionenkanälen die nozizeptive Erregung beeinflussen. Durch Anwendung von RT-PCR und eines neu entwickelten Antikörpers wurde die Ko-Expression von TRESK-Kanälen zusammen mit Kanälen der Transient-Receptor-Potential-Kationenkanalfamilie (TRP) und LPA-Rezeptoren in DRG-Neuronen nachgewiesen.
Durch rekombinante Ko-Expression von TRESK-Kanälen und LPA2-Rezeptoren in Xenopus Oozyten konnte durch Zugabe von LPA eine fast 10-fache Aktivierung des basalen K+-Stromes erzielt werden. Die Auswertung der Dosis-Wirkungskurve ergab einen EC50-Wert von 0,2 µM LPA. Die LPA-induzierte TRESK-Stromaktivierung konnte durch die Verwendung des mutierten Kanals TRESK[PQAVAD] oder durch die Zugabe des Phospholipase C (PLC) Inhibitors U73122 verhindert werden. Dies zeigt die Beteiligung des PLC-Signalwegs und die Bindung von Calcineurin an den TRESK-Kanal bei der Stromaktivierung. TRESK ist das einzige Mitglied der K2P-Familie, das eine LPA-induzierte Aktivierung des Stromes zeigt. TREK- und TASK-1-Ströme werden durch LPA inhibiert. In DRG-Neuronen mit kleinem Durchmesser wird Nozizeption durch die Aktivierung von TRPV1-Kanälen durch Hitze oder Capsaicin, dem Inhaltsstoff des Chilis, und zusätzlich durch die Substanz LPA verursacht. Ein weiteres Mitglied der TRP-Familie, der TRPA1-Kanal, ist bei der verstärkten Nozizeption während einer Entzündung involviert. Werden TRESK- und TRP-Kanäle in Xenopus Oozyten ko-exprimiert, verursacht LPA gleichzeitig einen Kationeneinwärts- wie auch -auswärtsstrom. Unter diesen Bedingungen verschob sich das Umkehrpotenzial in einen Bereich zwischen den Umkehrpotenzialen von Oozyten, die nur den K+-Kanal exprimieren und von Oozyten, die nur den unspezifischen Kationenkanal exprimieren. Durch diese Experimente konnte gezeigt werden, dass die LPA-induzierte Ko-Aktivierung von TRP-Kanälen und TRESK zu einer Begrenzung des exzitatorischen Effekts führen kann.
Die DRG-ähnlichen F11-Zellen exprimieren keine TRESK-Kanäle. Sie sind in der Lage durch Strompulse Aktionspotenziale zu generieren. Mit TRESK transfizierte F11-Zellen zeigten eine Verschiebung des Umkehrpotenzials in negative Richtung, einen größeren Auswärtsstrom und den Verlust von spannungsgesteuerten Natriumkanälen. Auch hohe Strompulse konnten keine Aktionspotenziale mehr auslösen.
Bei Spannungs-Klemme-Messungen von primären DRG-Neuronen von TRESK[wt]-Mäusen erhöhte sich der IKSO nach Zugabe von LPA um über 20 %. Im Gegensatz dazu zeigten DRG-Neurone von TRESK[ko]-Mäusen unter diesen Bedingungen eine leichte Hemmung des IKSO von etwa 10 %. In Neuronen, die TRPV1 exprimieren, führte LPA nicht nur zum Anstieg des IKSO, sondern auch zur Aktivierung eines Einwärtsstromes (TRPV1). Im Vergleich dazu wurde in TRESK[ko]-Neuronen durch LPA nur der Einwärtsstrom aktiviert.
In Strom-Klemme-Experimenten führte LPA-Applikation zur Entstehung von Aktionspotenzialen mit höherer Frequenz in Zellen von TRESK[ko]-Mäusen im Vergleich zu Zellen von TRESK[wt]-Mäusen. Zusätzlich wurde die Erregung, die durch Strompulse von 100 pA ausgelöst wurde, in den beiden Genotypen durch LPA unterschiedlich moduliert. Die Aktionspotenzialfrequenz in TRESK[wt]-Neuronen wurde gesenkt, in TRESK[ko]-Neuronen wurde sie erhöht.
Die vorliegende Arbeit zeigt, dass die Erregung nozizeptiver Neurone durch LPA aufgrund der Ko-Aktivierung der TRESK-Kanäle abgeschwächt werden kann. Die Erregbarkeit von sensorischen Neuronen wird strak durch die Aktivität und Expression der TRESK-Kanäle kontrolliert. Deswegen sind TRESK-Kanäle gute Kandidaten für die pharmakologische Behandlung von Schmerzkrankheiten.
After myocardial infarction, an inflammatory response is induced characterized by a sterile inflammation, followed by a reparative phase in order to induce cardiac healing. Neutrophils are the first immune cells that enter the ischemic tissue. Neutrophils have various functions in the ischemic heart, such as phagocytosis, production of reactive oxygen species or release of granule components. These functions can not only directly damage cardiac tissue, but are also necessary for initiating reparative effects in post-ischemic healing, indicating a dual role of neutrophils in cardiac healing after infarction.
In recent years, evidence has been growing that neutrophils show phenotypic and functional differences in distinct homeostatic and pathogenic settings.
Preliminary data of my working group using single-cell RNA-sequencing revealed the time- dependent heterogeneity of neutrophils, with different populations showing distinct gene expression profiles in ischemic hearts of mice, including the time-dependent appearance of a SiglecFhigh neutrophil population. To better understand the dynamics of neutrophil heterogeneity in the ischemic heart, my work aimed to validate previous findings at the protein level, as well as to investigate whether the distinct neutrophil populations show functional differences. Furthermore, in vivo depletion experiments were performed in order to modulate circulating neutrophil levels.
Hearts, blood, bone marrow and spleens were processed and analyzed from mice after 1 day and 3 days after the onset of cardiac ischemia and analyzed using flow cytometry.
Results showed that the majority of cardiac neutrophils isolated at day 3 after myocardial infarction were SiglecFhigh, whereas nearly no SiglecFhigh neutrophils could be isolated from ischemic hearts at day 1 after myocardial infarction.
No SiglecFhigh neutrophils could be found in the blood, spleen and bone marrow either after 1 day or 3 days after myocardial infarction, indicating that the SiglecFhigh state of neutrophils is unique to the ischemic cardiac tissue.
When I compared SiglecFhigh and SiglecFlow neutrophils regarding their phagocytosis activity and ROS production, SiglecFhigh neutrophils showed a higher phagocytosis ability than their SiglecFlow counterparts, as well as higher ROS production capacity.
In vivo depletion experiments could not achieve successful and efficient depletion of cardiac neutrophils either 1 day or 3 days after myocardial infarction, but led to a shift of a higher percentage of SiglecFhigh expressing neutrophils in the depletion group. Bone marrow neutrophil levels only showed partial depletion at day 3 after MI. Regarding blood neutrophils, depletion efficiently reduced circulating neutrophils at both time points, 1 and 3 days after MI. To summarize, this work showed the time-dependent presence of different neutrophil states in the ischemic heart. The main population of neutrophils isolated 3 days after MI showed a high expression of SiglecF, a unique state that could not be detected at different time points or other organs. These SiglecFhigh neutrophils showed functional differences regarding their phagocytosis ability and ROS production. Further investigation is needed to reveal what role these SiglecFhigh neutrophils could play within the ischemic heart.
To better target neutrophil depletion in vivo, more efficient or different anti-neutrophil strategies are needed.
Motivation and Aim:
Cardiovascular disease has been the leading cause of mortality and morbidity throughout the world. In developed countries, cardiovascular diseases are already responsible for a majority of deaths and will become the pre-eminent health problem worldwide (1,2). Rupture of atherosclerotic plaque accounts for approximately 70% of fatal acute myocardial infarction and sudden heart deaths. Conventional criterias for the diagnosis of “vulnerable plaques” are calcified nodules, yellow appearance of plaque, a thin cap, a large lipid core, severe luminal stenosis, intraplaque hemorrhage, inflammation, thrombogenicity, and plaque injury (3-5).
Noninvasive diagnosis of vulnerable plaque still remains a great challenge and a huge research prospect, which triggered us to investigate the feasibility of PET imaging on the evaluation of atherosclerosis. Nuclear imaging of atherosclerosis, especially co-registered imaging modalities, could provide a promising diagnostic tool including both anatomy and activities to identify vulnerable atherosclerotic plaque or early detection of inflammatory endothelium at risk. Furthermore, the development of specific imaging tracers for clinical applications is also a challenging task. The aim of this work was to assess the potential of novel PET imaging probes associated with intra-plaque inflammation on animal models and in human respectively.
Methods
In this work, several molecular imaging modalities were employed for evaluation of atherosclerosis. They included Positron emission tomography / Computed tomography (PET/CT) for human studies, and micro-PET, autoradiography and high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for animal studies. Radiotracers for PET imaging included the glucose analogue 18F-Fluorodeoxyglucose (18F-FDG), the somatostatin receptor avide tracer 68Ga-DOTATATE, and the Gallium-68 labeled fucoidan (68Ga-Fucoidan), which was developed as a PET tracer to detect endothelial P-selectin, which overexpressed at early stage of atherosclerosis and endothelial overlying activated plaque. Tracer’s capabilities were firstly assessed on cellular level in vitro. Subsequently, Animal studies were conducted in two animal models: 1, Apolipoprotein E (ApoE-/-) mice having severe atherosclerotic plaque; 2, Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) -induced mice for receiving acute vascular inflammation. Corresponding analyses on protein and histological level were conducted as well to confirm our results.
In human study, 16 patients with neuroendocrine tumors (NETs) were investigated on imaging vascular inflammation. These patients had undergone both 68Ga-DOTATATE PET/CT and 18F-FDG PET/CT for staging or restaging within 6 weeks. 16 patients were randomized into two groups: high-risk group and low-risk group. Uptake ratio of both tracers from two groups were compared and correlated with common cardiovascular risk factors.
Results and Conclusion
In murine study, the expression of somatostatin receptor 2, which is the main bio-target of 68Ga-DOTATATE on macrophage/monocyte was confirmed by flow cytometry and immunohistochemistry. Prospectively, high specific accumulation of 68Ga-DOTATATE to the macrophage within the plaques was observed in aorta lesions by autoradiography and by micro-PET. In study with 68Ga-fucoidan, a strong expression of P-selectin on active endothelium overlying on inflamed plaque but weaker on inactive plaques was confirmed. Specific focal uptake of 68Ga-fucoidan were detected at aorta segments by micro-PET, and correlated with high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), which was used to characterize the morphology of plaques. 68Ga-fucoidan also showed a greater affinity to active inflamed plaque in comparison of inactive fibrous plaque, which was assessed by autoradiography. Specificity of 68Ga-DOTATATE and 68Ga-fucoidan were confirmed by ex-vivo blocking autoradiography and in vivo blocking PET imaging respectively.
In human study, focal uptake of both 18F-FDG and 68Ga-DOTATATE was detected. Analyzing concordance of two tracers’ uptake ratio, Out of the 37 sites with highest focal 68Ga-DOTATATE uptake, 16 (43.2%) also had focal 18F-FDG uptake. Of 39 sites with highest 18F-FDG uptake, only 11 (28.2%) had a colocalized 68Ga-DOTATATE accumulation. Correlated tracers’ uptake and calcium burden and risk factors, Mean target-to-background ratio (TBR) of 68Ga-DOTATATE correlated significantly with the presence of calcified plaques (r=0.52), hypertension (r=0.60), age (r=0.56) and uptake of 18F-FDG (r=0.64). TBRmean of 18F-FDG correlated significantly only with hypertension (r=0.58; p<0.05). Additionally, TBRmean of 68Ga-DOTATATE is significant higher in the high risk group while TBRmean of 18F-FDG is not.
In conclusion, we evaluated vascular inflammation of atherosclerosis non-invasively using the two PET tracers: 68Ga-DOTATATE and 68Ga-Fucoidan. 68Ga-DOTATATE show specific affinity to infiltrated macrophage within the plaques. 68Ga-Fucoidan may hold the potential to discriminate between active and inactive atherosclerotic plaques in terms of variant accumulation on different-types of plaques. PET as leading molecular imaging technique provides superiority in assessing cellular activity, which is pivotal for understanding internal activity of atherosclerotic plaques. Since diagnosis of atherosclerosis is a complex and multi-dimensional task. More integrated imaging technology such as PET/MRI, faster imaging algorithm, more efficient radiotracer are required for further development of atherosclerosis imaging,
Recently, our research group identified in a study novel proalgesic targets in acute and chronic inflammatory pain: oxidized phospholipids (OxPL). OxPL, endogenous chemical irritants, are generated in inflamed tissue and mediate their pain-inducing function by activating the transient receptor potential channels TRPA1 and TRPV1. Both channels are sensors for chemical stimuli on primary afferent nociceptors and are involved in nociception. Here, with the help of calcium imaging and whole cell patch clamp recording techniques, it was found that OxPL metabolites acutely activate TRPA1 and TRPV1 ion channels to excite DRG neurons. OxPL species act predominantly via TRPA1 ion channels and mediate long- lasting non-selective inward currents. Notably, one pure OxPL compound, PGPC, activated a TRPA1 mutant lacking the binding site for electrophilic agonists, suggesting that OxPL activate TRP ion channels by an indirect mechanical mechanism. Next, it was investigated how OxPL influence the excitability of primary sensory neurons. Acute stimulation and fast calcium imaging revealed that OxPL elicit repetitive, spike-like calcium transients in small- diameter DRG neurons, which were fully blocked by antagonists against TRPA1/V1 and N- type voltage-gated calcium channels.
In search of a mechanism that drives repetitive spiking of DRG neurons, it was asked whether NaV1.9, a voltage-gated sodium channel involved in subthreshold excitability and nociception, is needed to trigger OxPL-induced calcium spikes and action potential firing. In electrophysiological recordings, both the combination of local application of OxPL and current injection were required to efficiently increase the action potential (AP) frequency of small-diameter sensory neurons. However, no difference was monitored in the resting membrane potential or OxPL-induced AP firing rate between wt and NaV1.9-deficient small diameter DRG neurons. To see whether NaV1.9 needs inflammatory conditions to be integrated in the OxPL-induced excitation cascade, sensory neurons were pretreated with a mixture of inflammatory mediators before OxPL application. Under inflammatory conditions both the AP and the calcium-spike frequency were drastically enhanced in response to an acute OxPL stimulus. Notably, this potentiation of OxPL stimuli was entirely lost in NaV1.9 deficient sensory neurons. Under inflammatory conditions, the resting membrane potential of NaV1.9-deficient neurons was more negative compared to wt neurons, suggesting that NaV1.9 shows resting activity only under inflammatory conditions.
In conclusion, OxPL are endogenous irritants that induce excitability in small-diameter DRG
neurons, a cellular model of nociceptors, via TRP activation. This effect is potentiated under inflammatory conditions. Under these conditions, NaV1.9 functions as essential mediator as it eases the initiation of excitability after OxPL stimulation.
As mutants in the human NaV1.9 mediate an enhanced or painless perception, this study provides new insight into the mechanism on how NaV1.9 amplifies stimuli of endogenous irritants under inflammatory conditions.