Articles |
-Linolenic Acid Modulates MacrophageVascular Smooth Muscle Cell Interactions
From the Faculty of Nutrition and Molecular and Cell Biology Group (Y.-Y.F., R.S.C.) and the Department of Veterinary Physiology and Pharmacology (K.S.R.), Texas A&M University, College Station.
Correspondence to Dr Robert S. Chapkin, Faculty of Nutrition, 442 Kleberg Center, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843-2471. E-mail chapkin@zeus.tamu.edu.
Abstract Macrophages and smooth muscle cells (SMCs)
are two of the major reactive cell types in
atherosclerosis, a disease characterized by
uncontrolled proliferation of SMCs. The present study was designed
to determine how dietary oils containing
-linolenic acid
(GLA) (primrose oil [PO]) and long-chain n-3 fatty acids (fish oil)
influence the ability of macrophages to modulate SMC DNA
synthesis in vitro. Mice were fed one of four diets containing 10%
(wt/wt) corn oil (CO), PO, fish oilCO mix (FC; 9:1, wt/wt), or fish
oilPO mix (FP; 1:3, wt/wt) for 2 weeks. Resident peritoneal
macrophages were isolated from these mice and seeded on a
semipermeable membrane with a 30-kDa cutoff. Macrophages were
preincubated with or without 50 µmol/L indomethacin
(a cyclooxygenase inhibitor) or 50
µmol/L L655,238 (a 5-lipoxygenase
inhibitor) for 30 minutes and subsequently cocultured with
naive murine aortic SMCs grown on culture dishes. DNA synthesis in SMCs
and prostaglandin formation in coculture supernatants were
measured at the end of a 39-hour incubation period. SMC DNA synthesis
was inhibited by 28% and 60% in PO and FP diets containing 10.1% and
8.2% GLA, respectively, relative to the control CO diet containing no
GLA or long-chain n-3 fatty acid. A fourfold increase in the levels of
PGE1, a potent antiproliferative eicosanoid derived
from GLA, was observed in the PO and FP groups relative to the control
CO group. Although PGE1 levels were not different between
the CO and FC dietary groups, 15% inhibition of SMC DNA synthesis,
relative to that in mice fed the control CO diet, was observed in mice
fed the FC diet containing 13.3% 20:5n-3 and 7.6% 22:6n-3 fatty
acids. Macrophage inhibition of SMC DNA synthesis and
proliferation in mice consuming GLA-enriched diets was blocked by
indomethacin but not by L655,238. Addition of exogenous
PGE1 (100 nmol/L) reversed the effect of
indomethacin. In experiments in which mice were fed
increasing levels of GLA-containing triglycerides, the
ability of macrophages to downregulate SMC proliferation was
modulated in a dose-dependent fashion. These data indicate that
macrophages isolated from animals consuming diets supplemented
with dietary oils containing GLA reduce SMC DNA synthesis and
proliferation in a cyclooxygenase-dependent manner
and therefore may favorably modulate the atherogenic process.
Key Words: prostaglandin E1 primrose oil fish oil atherosclerosis cyclooxygenase
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