A Novel Mouse Model of Atherosclerotic Plaque Instability for Drug Testing and Mechanistic/Therapeutic Discoveries Using Gene and MicroRNA Expression Profiling

Author:

Chen Yung-Chih1,Bui Anh Viet1,Diesch Jeannine1,Manasseh Richard1,Hausding Christian1,Rivera Jennifer1,Haviv Izhak1,Agrotis Alex1,Htun Nay Min1,Jowett Jeremy1,Hagemeyer Christoph Eugen1,Hannan Ross D.1,Bobik Alex1,Peter Karlheinz1

Affiliation:

1. From the Baker IDI Heart & Diabetes Institute, Melbourne, Australia (Y.-C.C., C.H., J.R., I.H., A.A., N.M.H., J.J., C.E.H., A.B., K.P.); Department of Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia (Y.-C.C., A.A., N.M.H., C.E.H., A.B., K.P.); Fluid Dynamics Group, CSIRO Materials Science and Engineering, Melbourne, Australia (A.V.B., R.M.); and Growth Regulation Laboratory, Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, Melbourne, Australia (J.D., R.D.H.).

Abstract

Rationale: The high morbidity/mortality of atherosclerosis is typically precipitated by plaque rupture and consequent thrombosis. However, research on underlying mechanisms and therapeutic approaches is limited by the lack of animal models that reproduce plaque instability observed in humans. Objective: Development and use of a mouse model of plaque rupture that reflects the end stage of human atherosclerosis. Methods and Results: On the basis of flow measurements and computational fluid dynamics, we applied a tandem stenosis to the carotid artery of apolipoprotein E–deficient mice on high-fat diet. At 7 weeks postoperatively, we observed intraplaque hemorrhage in ≈50% of mice, as well as disruption of fibrous caps, intraluminal thrombosis, neovascularization, and further characteristics typically seen in human unstable plaques. Administration of atorvastatin was associated with plaque stabilization and downregulation of monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 and ubiquitin. Microarray profiling of mRNA and microRNA (miR) and, in particular, its combined analysis demonstrated major differences in the hierarchical clustering of genes and miRs among nonatherosclerotic arteries, stable, and unstable plaques and allows the identification of distinct genes/miRs, potentially representing novel therapeutic targets for plaque stabilization. The feasibility of the described animal model as a discovery tool was established in a pilot approach, identifying a disintegrin and metalloprotease with thrombospondin motifs 4 (ADAMTS4) and miR-322 as potential pathogenic factors of plaque instability in mice and validated in human plaques. Conclusions: The newly described mouse model reflects human atherosclerotic plaque instability and represents a discovery tool toward the development and testing of therapeutic strategies aimed at preventing plaque rupture. Distinctly expressed genes and miRs can be linked to plaque instability.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology

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