Objectives: To determine the efficacy of perivascular delivery of Notch 1 siRNA in preventing injury-induced arterial remodeling. Methods and Results: Carotid artery ligation was performed to induce arterial remodeling. After 14 days, morphometric analysis confirmed increased vSMC growth and subsequent media thickening and neointimal formation. Laser capture microdissection, quantitative qRT-PCR and immunoblot analysis of medial tissue revealed a significant increase in Notch1 receptor and notch target gene, Hrt 1 and 2 expression in the injured vessels. Perivascular delivery of Notch 1 siRNA by pluronic gel inhibited the injury-induced increase in Notch 1 receptor and target gene expression when compared to scrambled siRNA controls while concomitantly reducing media thickening and neointimal formation to pre-injury, sham-operated levels. Selective Notch 1 knockdown also reversed the injury-induced inhibition of pro-apoptotic Bax expression while decreasing injury-induced anti-apoptotic Bcl-XL expression to sham-operated control levels. In parallel experiments, proliferative cyclin levels, as measured by PCNA expression, were reversed to sham-operated control levels following selective Notch 1 knockdown. Conclusion: These results suggest that injury-induced arterial remodeling can be successfully inhibited by localized perivascular delivery of Notch 1 siRNA. © 2014 Redmond et al.
CITATION STYLE
Redmond, E. M., Liu, W., Hamm, K., Hatch, E., Cahill, P. A., & Morrow, D. (2014). Perivascular delivery of Notch 1 siRNA inhibits injury-induced arterial remodeling. PLoS ONE, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0084122
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