Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2893365 Atherosclerosis 2009 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

The cellular composition of atherosclerotic lesions is determined by many factors including cell infiltration, proliferation and cell death. Tumor suppressor gene p53 has been shown to regulate both cell proliferation and cell death in many cell types. In the present study, we investigated the role of macrophage p53 in the pathogenesis of early and advanced atherosclerosis.Using the Cre-loxP system we found that absence of macrophage p53 (p53del) strongly reduces apoptosis of macrophages both in early and advanced atherosclerotic lesions (−59% and −37%, respectively). Consequently, in advanced atherosclerosis, reduced apoptosis upon absence of macrophage p53, coincided with increased acellular necrotic core formation (+96%), increased macrophage content (+24%), and reduced cholesterol cleft accumulation (−41%). Proliferation was not affected by the absence of macrophage p53 in both early and advanced atherosclerosis. However, these significant changes in lesional cell death did not affect total lesion area in both early and advanced atherosclerosis, neither in the aortic root nor in the aortic arch and thoracic aorta in ApoE-deficient mice.Our data demonstrate that macrophage p53 is an important regulator of macrophage apoptosis, thereby preventing necrotic death of lesional macrophages. The regulation of this cell death balance directly affects lesion composition.

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