作者
Ingrid Gomez,Ben Ward,Céline Souilhol,Chiara Recarti,Mark P. Ariaans,Jessica Johnston,Amanda Burnett,Marwa Mahmoud,Le Anh Luong,Laura West,Merete Long,Siôn A Parry,Rachel Woods,Carl J. Hulston,Birke J. Benedikter,Chiara Niespolo,Rohit Bazaz,Sheila E. Francis,Endre Kiss-Tóth,Marc van Zandvoort,Andreas Schober,Paul G. Hellewell,Paul C. Evans,Victoria Ridger
摘要
Abstract Neutrophils are implicated in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis but are seldom detected in atherosclerotic plaques. We investigated whether neutrophil-derived microvesicles may influence arterial pathophysiology. Here we report that levels of circulating neutrophil microvesicles are enhanced by exposure to a high fat diet, a known risk factor for atherosclerosis. Neutrophil microvesicles accumulate at disease-prone regions of arteries exposed to disturbed flow patterns, and promote vascular inflammation and atherosclerosis in a murine model. Using cultured endothelial cells exposed to disturbed flow, we demonstrate that neutrophil microvesicles promote inflammatory gene expression by delivering miR-155, enhancing NF-κB activation. Similarly, neutrophil microvesicles increase miR-155 and enhance NF-κB at disease-prone sites of disturbed flow in vivo. Enhancement of atherosclerotic plaque formation and increase in macrophage content by neutrophil microvesicles is dependent on miR-155 . We conclude that neutrophils contribute to vascular inflammation and atherogenesis through delivery of microvesicles carrying miR-155 to disease-prone regions.