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Atherosclerosis and Lipoproteins |
From the Research Department, Kantonal Hospital St Gallen, St Gallen, Switzerland.
Correspondence to Burkhard Ludewig, Research Department, Kantonsspital St Gallen, Rorschacherstrasse 95, CH-9007 St Gallen, Switzerland. E-mail burkhard.ludewig{at}kssg.ch
Objective— The purpose of this study was to examine the relative contribution of different immunopathological mechanisms during murine cytomegalovirus (MCMV)-mediated acceleration of atheroma formation in apolipoprotein E–deficient (apoE–/–) mice.
Methods and Results— To distinguish between the effects of systemic activation and cognate immune reactivity against a pathogen-derived persisting antigen in the vasculature, we used hypercholesterolemic transgenic mice constitutively expressing the β-galactosidase (β-gal) transgene in the cardiovascular system (apoE–/–xSM-LacZ). After infection with β-gal–recombinant MCMV-LacZ, apoE–/–, and apoE–/–xSM-LacZ mice mounted comparable cellular immune responses against the virus. β-gal–specific CD8+ T cells expanded rapidly and remained detectable for at least 100 days in both mouse strains. However, compared with apoE–/– mice, apoE–/–xSM-LacZ mice developed drastically accelerated atherosclerosis. Moreover, atherosclerotic lesions in MCMV-LacZ–infected apoE–/–xSM-LacZ but not apoE–/– mice were associated with pronounced inflammatory infiltrates.
Conclusions— Taken together, our data indicate that chronic immune reactivity against pathogen-derived antigens persisting in the vasculature significantly exacerbates atherogenesis.
This study demonstrates that T cell responses directed against persisting microbial antigen within the vasculature favor the development of an inflammatory environment that is important for the acceleration of atherosclerotic lesion development.
Key Words: cytomegalovirus atherosclerosis inflammation immunopathology coronary heart disease
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