In vivo magnetic resonance imaging-based detection of heterogeneous endothelial response in thoracic and abdominal aorta to short-term high-fat diet ascribed to differences in perivascular adipose tissue in mice

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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Long-term feeding with a high-fat diet (HFD) induces endothelial dysfunction in mice, but early HFD-induced effects on endothelium have not been well characterized. METHODS AND RESULTS: Using an magnetic resonance imaging-based methodology that allows characterization of endothelial function in vivo, we demonstrated that short-term (2 weeks) feeding with a HFD to C57BL/6 mice or to E3L.CETP mice resulted in the impairment of acetylcholine-induced response in the abdominal aorta (AA), whereas, in the thoracic aorta (TA), the acetylcholine-induced response was largely preserved. Similarly, HFD resulted in arterial stiffness in the AA, but not in the TA. The difference in HFD-induced response was ascribed to distinct characteristics of perivascular adipose tissue in the TA and AA, related to brown-and white-like adipose tissue, respectively, as assessed by histology, immunohistochemistry, and Raman spectroscopy. In contrast, short-term HFD-induced endothelial dysfunction could not be linked to systemic insulin resistance, changes in plasma concentration of nitrite, or concentration of biomarkers of glycocalyx disruption (syndecan-1 and endocan), endothelial inflammation (soluble form of vascular cell adhesion molecule 1, soluble form of intercellular adhesion molecule 1 and soluble form of E-selectin), endothelial permeability (soluble form of fms-like tyrosine kinase 1 and angiopoietin 2), and hemostasis (tissue plasminogen activator and plasminogen activator inhibitor 1). CONCLUSIONS: Short-term feeding with a HFD induces endothelial dysfunction in the AA but not in the TA, which could be ascribed to a differential response of perivascular adipose tissue to a HFD in the AA versus TA. Importantly, early endothelial dysfunction in the AA is not linked to elevation of classical systemic biomarkers of endothelial dysfunction.

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Bar, A., Kieronska-Rudek, A., Proniewski, B., Suraj-Prażmowska, J., Czamara, K., Marczyk, B., … Chlopicki, S. (2020). In vivo magnetic resonance imaging-based detection of heterogeneous endothelial response in thoracic and abdominal aorta to short-term high-fat diet ascribed to differences in perivascular adipose tissue in mice. Journal of the American Heart Association, 9(21). https://doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.120.016929

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