Selective Activation of Lectin-Like Oxidized Low-Density Lipoprotein Receptor-1 Mediates C-Reactive Protein-Evoked Endothelial Vasodilator Dysfunction in Coronary Arterioles

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Abstract

Rationale: Studies in cultured endothelium implicate that lectin-like oxidized low-density lipoprotein receptor-1 (LOX-1) or Fcγ receptor II (CD32) contributes to the proatherogenic effects of C-reactive protein (CRP). However, the identity of the receptors linking to deleterious actions of CRP in vasomotor regulation remains unknown. Objective: We tested the hypothesis that LOX-1 contributes to adverse effects of CRP on endothelium-dependent vasomotor function in resistance arterioles. Methods and results: Porcine coronary arterioles were isolated for vasoreactivity study, dihydroethidium fluorescence staining of superoxide, immunohistochemical localization of receptors, immunoprecipitation of receptor/CRP interaction, and protein blot. Intraluminal treatment of pressurized arterioles with a pathophysiological level of CRP (7 μg/mL; 60 minutes) attenuated endothelium-dependent nitric oxide-mediated and prostacyclin-mediated dilations to serotonin and arachidonic acid, respectively. LOX-1 and CD32 were detected in the endothelium of arterioles. Blockade of LOX-1 with either pharmacological antagonist κ-carrageenan or anti-LOX-1 antibody prevented the detrimental effect of CRP on vasodilator function, whereas anti-CD32 antibody treatment was ineffective. Denudation of endothelium and blockade of LOX-1 but not CD32 prevented CRP-induced elevation of superoxide in the vessel wall. CRP was coimmunoprecipitated with LOX-1 and CD32 from CRP-treated arterioles. Similarly, LOX-1 and CD32 blockade prevented CRP-induced arteriolar expression of plasminogen activator inhibitor-1, a thrombogenic protein. Conclusions: CRP elicits endothelium-dependent oxidative stress and compromises nitric oxide-mediated and prostacyclin-mediated vasomotor function via LOX-1 activation. In contrast, both LOX-1 and CD32 mediate plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 upregulation in arterioles by CRP. Thus, activation of LOX-1 and CD32 may contribute to vasomotor dysfunction and proatherogenic actions of CRP, respectively. © 2013 American Heart Association, Inc.

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APA

Hein, T. W., Qamirani, E., Ren, Y., Xu, X., Thengchaisri, N., & Kuo, L. (2014). Selective Activation of Lectin-Like Oxidized Low-Density Lipoprotein Receptor-1 Mediates C-Reactive Protein-Evoked Endothelial Vasodilator Dysfunction in Coronary Arterioles. Circulation Research, 114(1), 92–100. https://doi.org/10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.114.301763

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