Journal of Translational Medicine (Feb 2020)

C-reactive protein derived from perivascular adipose tissue accelerates injury-induced neointimal hyperplasia

  • Jia-Yuan Chen,
  • Xiao-Lin Zhu,
  • Wen-Hao Liu,
  • Yong Xie,
  • Hai-Feng Zhang,
  • XiaoQiao Wang,
  • Ru Ying,
  • Zhi-Teng Chen,
  • Mao-Xiong Wu,
  • Qiong Qiu,
  • Jing-Feng Wang,
  • Yang-Xin Chen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12967-020-02226-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract Aim Inflammation within the perivascular adipose tissue (PVAT) in obesity plays an important role in cardiovascular disorders. C-reactive protein (CRP) level in obesity patients is significantly increased and associated with the occurrence and progression of cardiovascular disease. We tested the hypothesis CRP derived from PVAT in obesity contributes to vascular remodeling after injury. Methods A high-fat diet (HFD) significantly increased CRP expression in PVAT. We transplanted thoracic aortic PVAT from wild-type (WT) or transgenic CRP-expressing (CRPTG) mice to the injured femoral artery in WT mice. Results At 4 weeks after femoral artery injury, the neointimal/media ratio was increased significantly in WT mice that received PVAT from CRPTG mice compared with that in WT mice that received WT PVAT. Transplanted CRPTG PVAT also significantly accelerated adventitial macrophage infiltration and vasa vasorum proliferation. It was revealed greater macrophage infiltration in CRPTG adipose tissue than in WT adipose tissue and CRP significantly increased the adhesion rate of monocytes through receptor Fcγ RI. Proteome profiling showed CRP over-expression promoted the expression of chemokine (C-X-C motif) ligand 7 (CXCL7) in adipose tissue, transwell assay showed CRP increased monocyte migration indirectly via the induction of CXCL7 expression in adipocytes. Conclusion CRP derived from PVAT was significantly increased in HFD mice and promoted neointimal hyperplasia after vascular injury.

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