Author:
Xing Dongqi,Feng Wenguang,Nöt Laszlo G.,Miller Andrew P.,Zhang Yun,Chen Yiu-Fai,Majid-Hassan Erum,Chatham John C.,Oparil Suzanne
Abstract
Inflammation plays a major role in vascular disease. We have shown that leukocyte infiltration and inflammatory mediator expression contribute to vascular remodeling after endoluminal injury. This study tested whether increasing protein O-linked- N-acetylglucosamine ( O-GlcNAc) levels with glucosamine (GlcN) and O-(2-acetamido-2-deoxy-d-glucopyranosylidene) amino- N-phenylcarbamate (PUGNAc) inhibits acute inflammatory and neointimal responses to endoluminal arterial injury. Ovariectomized rats were treated with a single injection of GlcN (0.3 mg/g ip), PUGNAc (7 nmol/g ip) or vehicle (V) 2 h before balloon injury of the right carotid artery. O-GlcNAc-modified protein levels decreased markedly in injured arteries of V-treated rats at 30 min, 2 h, and 24 h after injury but returned to control (contralateral uninjured) levels after 14 days. Both GlcN and PUGNAc increased O-GlcNAc-modified protein levels in injured arteries compared with V controls at 30 min postinjury; the GlcN-mediated increase persisted at 24 h but was not evident at 14 days. Proinflammatory mediator expression increased markedly after injury and was reduced significantly (30–50%) by GlcN and PUGNAc. GlcN and PUGNAc also inhibited infiltration of neutrophils and monocytes in injured arteries. Chronic (14 days) treatment with GlcN reduced neointima formation in injured arteries by 50% compared with V controls. Acute GlcN and PUGNAc treatment increases O-GlcNAc-modified protein levels and inhibits acute inflammatory responses in balloon-injured rat carotid arteries; 14 day GlcN treatment inhibits neointima formation in these vessels. Augmenting O-GlcNAc modification of proteins in the vasculature may represent a novel anti-inflammatory and vasoprotective mechanism.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology
Cited by
83 articles.
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