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Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology. 2000;20:152-163

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(Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology. 2000;20:152.)
© 2000 American Heart Association, Inc.


Atherosclerosis and Lipoproteins

Fish Oil Supplementation Prevents Neointima Formation in Nonhypercholesterolemic Balloon-Injured Rabbit Carotid Artery by Reducing Medial and Adventitial Cell Activation

Elisabetta Faggin; Massimo Puato; Angela Chiavegato; Rafaella Franch; Paolo Pauletto; Saverio Sartore

From the Department of Experimental and Clinical Medicine (E.F., M.P., P.P.) and the Department of Biomedical Sciences (A.C., R.F., S.S.), University of Padua, and the CNR Unit for Muscle Biology and Physiopathology (S.S.), Padua, Italy.

Correspondence to Saverio Sartore, PhD, Department of Biomedical Sciences, University of Padua, Viale G. Colombo, 3, I-35121 Padua, Italy. E-mail sartore{at}civ.bio.unipd.it

Abstract—We asked whether balloon-injured neointima formation in the presence of high/low serum cholesterol (CT) levels might be affected by dietary supplementation with fish oil (FO). To test this hypothesis, we examined the differentiation, proliferation, or apoptosis profile of smooth muscle cell (SMC) and adventitial cell response to a mild injury induced via a Fogarty catheter in the carotid artery of adult rabbits that had been fed a standard chow or 0.5% CT-enriched diet starting 4 weeks before the lesion. One week before surgery, animals received FO supplementation. This regimen was continued for the following 3 weeks. The effect of FO on the early proliferative/migratory response of carotid SMCs was also examined in 2- and 7-day–injured normocholesterolemic rabbits. As controls, animals subjected to 3-week endothelial injury and animals kept on a 7-week CT diet were used. Carotid cryosections from the various animal groups were evaluated for morphometry (image analysis), differentiation (immunofluorescence with monoclonal antibodies specific for smooth muscle markers, ie, myosin isoforms, SM22, and fibronectin), proliferation (bromodeoxyuridine incorporation), and apoptosis (terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase–mediated dUTP nick end-labeling). FO treatment significantly reduced the development of intimal thickening in normocholesterolemic rabbits but had no efficacy in the presence of relatively higher serum CT levels. At day 2 (adventitia) and day 7 (neointima, media, and adventitia), the proliferation index of SMCs in FO-treated injured rabbits was markedly lower than in untreated injured controls. Concomitantly with the antiproliferative effect, FO was able to decrease the size of 2 cell types involved in the cell growth response to endothelial injury, namely, the "fetal-type" medial SMC subpopulation and the fibroblast-derived adventitial myofibroblasts. Thus, in our experimental conditions, a low CT level is a permissive condition for FO to prevent neointima formation to a considerable extent. This event is attributable to the early postinjury effect of FO on SMC/adventitial cell proliferation/differentiation patterns.


Key Words: smooth muscle cells • adventitia • fish oil • endothelial injury • atherogenesis




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S. Sartore, A. Chiavegato, E. Faggin, R. Franch, M. Puato, S. Ausoni, and P. Pauletto
Contribution of Adventitial Fibroblasts to Neointima Formation and Vascular Remodeling: From Innocent Bystander to Active Participant
Circ. Res., December 7, 2001; 89(12): 1111 - 1121.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]