Articles |
-Tocopherol, and Hypercholesterolemia to Early Atherosclerosis in Hamsters
From the Department of Metabolic Diseases, Bristol-Myers Squibb Pharmaceutical Research Institute, Princeton, NJ.
Correspondence to Rex A. Parker, PhD, Department of Metabolic Diseases, Rm K-3111, Bristol-Myers Squibb Pharmaceutical Research Institute, PO Box 4000, Princeton, NJ 08543-4000.
Abstract A model of early atherosclerosis in hamsters
with moderate hypercholesterolemia (217 to 271 mg/dL) was established
that was highly responsive to exogenous antioxidants. A key feature of
this model was elevation of vascular oxidative stress by use of a diet
deficient in nutritional antioxidants and supplemented with corn oil
(10%) and cholesterol (0.2%, 0.4%, or 0.8%). After 10 weeks on the
0.4% cholesterol diet, mean plasma
-tocopherol levels declined from
5.68±0.30 to 1.27±0.15 µg/mL, while monocyte-macrophage foam cell
lesions in the aortic arch, as assayed by video microscopy/image
analysis of oil red Ostained histological specimens,
increased from undetectable at week 0 to 60 900±5400
µm2 per specimen at week 10 (mean±SEM, n=36).
-Tocopherol or probucol administered for 10 weeks markedly
suppressed LDL oxidation ex vivo and profoundly inhibited aortic foam
cell formation. However, the effects of antioxidants on aortic lesions
were attenuated at higher plasma cholesterol levels, although LDL
oxidation ex vivo was effectively inhibited. With a plasma cholesterol
level at
250 mg/dL, the maximum effect of
-tocopherol on lesion
size reached
36% of control value, and the dose for half-maximal
effect was
10
mg · kg-1 · d-1, which
resulted in a plasma
-tocopherol value of
20 µg/mL. Under these
conditions a linear, inverse correlation of aortic lesion size and
plasma
-tocopherol concentration was observed (n=68,
r=-0.581, P<.001). The data demonstrate that
LDL oxidation is a significant component of early atherogenesis in this
model but suggest that hyperlipidemia can outweigh the therapeutic
effectiveness of antioxidants. The high sensitivity of aortic lesion
initiation to
-tocopherol in hamsters maintained on moderately
hypercholesterolemic diets depleted of endogenous antioxidants
demonstrates that vascular oxidative stress can be isolated from other
causative factors in an in vivo model of atherosclerosis.
Key Words:
-tocopherol antioxidant LDL oxidation glutathione atherosclerosis
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