Vascular Biology (Nov 2024)
Whole-body insulin resistance leads to accelerated atherosclerosis: role for Nox2 NADPH oxidase
Abstract
Insulin resistance underpins the progression of type 2 diabetes mellitus and leads to a collection of risk factors for the development of atherosclerosis. Whether or not insulin resistance at a whole-body level per se leads to accelerated atherosclerosis is unclear. To answer this question, we generated atherosclerosis-prone mice with whole-body insulin resistance secondary to haploinsufficiency of the insulin receptor (IR+/−) deficient in ApoE−/− (IR+/−/ApoE−/−). IR+/−/ ApoE−/− and ApoE−/− littermates had similar weight, lipids, and glucose tolerance at baseline. After 12 weeks of Western high-cholesterol diet, IR+/−/ApoE−/− had significantly more atherosclerosis in the thoracoabdominal aorta and at the level of the aortic sinus than ApoE−/− littermates. Excess Nox2 NADPH oxidase (Nox2) derived superoxide has been suggested to underpin diabetes-related atherosclerosis. In IR+/−/ApoE−/− we examined the effect of inhibiting Nox2 using genetic or pharmacological approaches on the development of atherosclerosis. To genetically delete Nox2, we generated IR+/−/ApoE−/−/Nox2−/y and to inhibit Nox2 pharmacologically, we treated IR+/−/ApoE−/− with the peptide Nox2 inhibitor gp91dstat. IR+/−/ApoE−/−/Nox2−/y had significant disruption of the aortic wall with increased thoracoabdominal atherosclerosis when compared to IR+/−/ApoE−/−/Nox2+/y littermates. Inhibition of Nox2 using gp91dstat reduced atherosclerosis in the thoracoabdominal aorta of IR+/−/ApoE−/−. Whole-body insulin resistance accelerates the development of atherosclerosis. Genetic inhibition of Nox2 leads to disruption of the aortic wall in IR+/−/ApoE−/− mice with accelerated atherosclerosis, whereas pharmacological Nox2 inhibition reduces atherosclerosis in IR+/−/ApoE−/− without disruption of the arterial wall.
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