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Jara Luis J - - 2007
Atherosclerosis (AT) is a metabolic, systemic inflammatory/immune disease characterized by lipoproteins metabolism alteration that leads to immune/inflammatory system activation with the consequent proliferation of smooth-muscle cells, narrowing arteries and atheroma formation. Antiphospholipid syndrome (APS) is a systemic autoimmune disease characterized by thrombophilic state and circulating antiphospholipid antibodies (aPL) including anti ...
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Imaizumi Tadaatsu - - 2007
AIM: Retinoic acid-inducible gene-I (RIG-I) is one of the genes induced by interferon (IFN)-gamma which plays an important role in atherosclerosis. The aim of this study is to examine if RIG-I is involved in atherosclerosis. METHODS: The expression of RIG-I in atherosclerotic lesions in human aorta was examined by immunohistochemical ...
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Lynch Susan F - - 2007
Microparticles are circulating, phospholipid rich, submicron particles released from the membranes of endothelial cells, platelets, leucocytes and erythrocytes. Investigation into their biological activity has revealed diverse actions in coagulation, cell signalling and cellular interactions. These actions are mediated through their phospholipid rich surfaces and the expression of cell surface molecules ...
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Zirlik Andreas - - 2007
BACKGROUND: Strong evidence supports a role for CD40 ligand (CD40L) as marker and mediator of inflammatory diseases such as atherosclerosis. Despite extensive characterization of CD40, the classic receptor of CD40L, its role in immune defense against inflammatory diseases remains uncertain. The present study aimed to characterize the contribution of CD40 ...
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Madamanchi Nageswara R - - 2007
Increased production of reactive oxygen species in mitochondria, accumulation of mitochondrial DNA damage, and progressive respiratory chain dysfunction are associated with atherosclerosis or cardiomyopathy in human investigations and animal models of oxidative stress. Moreover, major precursors of atherosclerosis-hypercholesterolemia, hyperglycemia, hypertriglyceridemia, and even the process of aging-all induce mitochondrial dysfunction. Chronic ...
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Shroff Rukshana C - - 2007
Vascular calcification is an active, cell-mediated process that results from an imbalance between the promoters and inhibitors of mineralization. The process of vascular calcification shares many similarities with that of skeletal mineralization. However, while skeletal mineralization is a regulated process induced by complex, well-timed developmental cues, vascular calcification is a ...
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Ivanov Vadim - - 2007
Certain drastic behavioral modifications by arterial wall smooth muscle cells (SMC) have been considered key steps in the formation of atherosclerotic lesions: massive migration of SMC from the media to the intima layer of the vessel, dedifferentiation of SMC to proliferating phenotype, and increased secretion of inflammatory cytokines as a ...
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Zhou Dong - - 2007
1. Fibrin D-dimer is considered a consistent and independent marker of the risk of cardiovascular disease in population studies, as well as being related to atherosclerosis severity in patients. However, the role of fibrin D-dimer in macrophage-derived foam cell formation during atherogenesis remains unclear. 2. In the present study, using ...
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Ghittoni Raffaella - - 2007
Statins are cholesterol-lowering drugs extensively used for primary and secondary prevention of cardiovascular events related to hypercholesterolemia. Because of their capacity to inhibit HMG-CoA reductase, statins also block the production of isoprenoids required for post-translational modification of proteins such as Ras superfamily GTPases, which are master regulators in signaling pathways ...
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Chanson Marc - - 2007
There is an increasing appreciation of the importance of gap junction proteins (connexins) in modulating the severity of inflammatory diseases. Multiple epidemiological gene association studies have detected a link between a single nucleotide polymorphism in the human connexin37 (Cx37) gene and coronary artery disease or myocardial infarction in various populations. ...
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Fantuzzi Giamila - - 2007
The prevalence of obesity, especially among the young, is dramatically increasing in the United States. Obesity is associated with accelerated atherosclerosis and increased rates of cardiovascular death. There are many plausible mechanisms by which an increase in adipose tissue could adversely affect the vessel wall. These include the changes in ...
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Khan Razi - - 2007
Intimal thickening is the most important cause of in-stent restenosis. The pathology of intimal thickening is attributable to a local inflammatory response after vascular injury which results in the production of cytokines. Transforming growth factor-beta1 (TGF-beta1) is a profibrotic cytokine that is involved in the induction of intimal thickening. Up-regulation ...
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Wu Ben J - - 2007
Probucol [4,4'-[(1-methylethylidene)bis(thio)]bis-[2,6-bis(1,1-dimethylethyl)phenol]] was withdrawn from the United States market because it failed to inhibit atherosclerosis in human femoral arteries, yet the drug was shown subsequently to inhibit atherosclerosis in human carotid arteries, and probucol monosuccinate ester is presently being tested in a phase III clinical trial as an antiatherosclerotic compound ...
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Lin Shing-Jong - - 2007
Salvianolic acid B (Sal B), a water-soluble antioxidant derived from a Chinese medicinal herb, is believed to have multiple therapeutic and preventive against human vascular diseases, including atherosclerosis and restenosis. To elucidate the underlying cellular mechanisms, we produced hypercholesterolemia by feeding apo-E-deficient mice a 0.15% cholesterol diet and inflammation in ...
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Corsten Maarten F - - 2007
The relatively poor correlation between the risk of atherosclerotic plaque rupture and the degree of luminal obstruction before this event implies a strong imperative for in vivo detection of the processes underlying progressive plaque destabilization. In addition to the morphologic characteristics, apoptosis and inflammation comprise two important indicators of plaque ...
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Levonen Anna-Liisa - - 2007
BACKGROUND: Reactive oxygen species (ROS) play a major role in vascular inflammation and pathophysiology of many vascular diseases such as atherosclerosis and injury-induced neointima formation after balloon angioplasty. Nuclear factor E2-related factor-2 (Nrf2) is a transcription factor orchestrating antioxidant and cytoprotective responses on oxidative and electrophilic stress, and it has ...
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Blanc-Brude Olivier P - - 2007
OBJECTIVES: Inflammatory macrophage apoptosis is critical to atherosclerotic plaque formation, but its mechanisms remain enigmatic. We hypothesized that inhibitor of apoptosis protein (IAP) survivin regulates macrophage death in atherosclerosis. METHODS AND RESULTS: Western blot analysis revealed discrete survivin expression in human aorta lipid streaks but virtually none in advanced atherosclerotic ...
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Moran Edward P - - 2007
Vascular remodeling and atheromatous lesion formation are determined in part by the balance between apoptosis and survival of vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs). In the chronic stages, apoptosis of VSMCs in the atherosclerotic plaques contributes to the weakening and potential rupture of the plaque causing pathologies such as acute coronary ...
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Dusse Luci Maria SantAna - - 2007
Tissue factor (TF) is the primary physiological initiator of blood coagulation. TF has a high-affinity for factor (F) VII resulting in the formation of (TF:FVII:FVIIa) bimolecular complex which, in the presence of Ca(2+), increases the enzymatic activity of FVIIa towards its natural substrates, FIX and FX, generating their active forms ...
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Lehrke Michael - - 2007
OBJECTIVES: This study was designed to determine the association of CXCL16 with inflammation, atherosclerosis, and acute coronary syndromes. BACKGROUND: Vascular inflammation coincides with uptake of modified lipoproteins in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis. CXCL16 is a protein that shares scavenger receptor function, promoting uptake of modified lipids, with the activities of ...
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Forrester James S - - 2007
Inflammatory cytokines have a central role in atherogenesis and plaque rupture. These mediators, including tumor necrosis factor, interleukins, and matrix metalloproteinases and transforming growth factor-beta are also prominent in other chronic progressive diseases characterized by cell apoptosis and tissue fibrosis. This review extends the inflammation hypothesis to critical analysis of ...
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Wang Chao-Hung - - 2007
OBJECTIVE: Stem cell factor (SCF) through its cognate receptor, the tyrosine kinase c-kit, promotes survival and biological functions of hematopoietic stem cells and progenitors. However, whether SCF/c-kit interactions exacerbate intimal hyperplasia through attenuating VSMC apoptosis induced by vascular injury has not been thoroughly investigated. METHODS AND RESULTS: VSMCs were stimulated ...
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Matarese Giuseppe - - 2007
The role of the adipose tissue in immunity has recently emerged, and there is now ample evidence that this role is elucidated by a number of cytokine-like hormones produced by adipocytes - called adipokines. The most relevant adipokines are leptin, adiponectin and visfatin, and all have marked effects on metabolic ...
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Gordon Siamon - - 2007
Macrophages are present as resident cells in adipose tissue, and blood monocytes are recruited in increased numbers to sites of lipid accumulation in atherosclerosis, a modified form of inflammation in the arterial wall. Recent findings reported by 3 separate groups in this issue of the JCI provide evidence for distinct ...
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Blanco-Colio Luis M - - 2007
Atherosclerosis is currently described as an inflammatory disease given that the main components of chronic inflammation are present in this process: cell recruitment, proliferation, neovascularization, and sclerosis. Vascular lesions are caused by inflammatory and fibroproliferative responses to injury of the endothelium and vascular smooth muscle cells. Interaction between members of ...
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Guazzi Marco - - 2007
Phosphodiesterases (PDE) are a class of proteins whose most relevant biological activity concerns the modulation of intracellular levels of cyclic nucleotides, e.g., cGMP and cAMP. PDE isoenzyme 5 (PDE5) is specifically involved in cGMP inactivation in the smooth muscle cell. Chemical inhibition of PDE5 by sildenafil, tadalafil or vardenafil recently ...
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Wolf Sabine C - - 2007
OBJECTIVE AND BACKGROUND: Inflammation plays a critical role in all stages of atherogenesis. Proliferating vascular smooth muscle cells (SMC) and endothelial cells (EC) enhancing the inflammatory response, both contribute to the progression of atherosclerosis. Anti-proliferative, anti-inflammatory and anti-oxidative therapy seems to be a promising therapeutic strategy. The aim of this ...
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Fievet Catherine - - 2007
Experimental approaches to understand the pathogenesis and to develop treatments of atherosclerosis involve studies in animal and cellular models. However, relevant animal models are rare since atherosclerosis is a disease that naturally affects only humans and one or two other species (pigs and certain primates). For a long time, atherosclerosis ...
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Xu Xinsheng - - 2007
Arterial inflammation is a significant component of atherosclerotic disease-specific immune responses directed against autoantigens or pathogen-derived antigens in the vascular wall could initiate and/or maintain atherosclerotic processes. Atherosclerosis is now regarded as a chronic inflammatory disease. Developing in response to injury in the vessel wall, it is characterized by the ...
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White M C - - 2007
Leukocyte recruitment and the expression of pro-inflammatory cytokines are prevalent characteristics of early atherogenesis. Recently, several inflammatory mediators have been linked to atheroma formation and inflammatory pathways have been shown to promote thrombosis. The discovery of mast cells, activated T lymphocytes and macrophages in atherosclerotic lesions, the detection of human ...
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Chamberlain Ciara M - - 2007
The mechanism and role of apoptotic cell death in the pathogenesis of atheromatous diseases is an area of intense research. Atherosclerosis is an inflammatory disease and as such, immune-mediated cell killing plays an important role. Recent studies have suggested that Granzyme B and perforin play an important role in atherogenesis. ...
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Tabas Ira - - 2007
Although both cholesterol and plant sterols are abundant in our diets, our intestinal epithelial cells selectively and efficiently rid the body of plant sterols. However, a rare mutation in plant sterol excretion in humans results in the accumulation of plant sterols, particularly sitosterol, in the plasma and tissues. Sitosterol differs ...
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Singh Mahipal - - 2007
Osteopontin, also called cytokine Eta-1, is a multifunctional protein containing Arg-Gly-Asp-Ser (RGDS) cell-binding sequence. It interacts with alpha(v)beta1, alpha(v)beta3 and alpha(v)beta5 integrins and CD44 receptors. OPN is suggested to play a role during inflammation via the recruitment and retention of macrophages and T-cells to inflamed sites. OPN regulates the production ...
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Niessner A - - 2007
Accumulation of inflammatory cells identifies atherosclerotic plaque at risk for rupture. Typically, activated immune cells occupy the rupture-prone areas of the atherosclerotic lesion. These cells are an appealing therapeutic target for novel strategies of plaque stabilization. Biologic consequences of plaque inflammation ultimately depend not only on the cellular players populating ...
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Croce Kevin - - 2007
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: The aim of this article is to highlight the importance of thrombotic processes in the development and complications of atherosclerotic vascular disease. RECENT FINDINGS: Thrombin generated at sites of vascular inflammation activates major atheroma-associated cells including endothelial cells, platelets, smooth muscle cells, monocytes, and macrophages. Thrombin-activated cells ...
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Guo Weimin - - 2007
Treatment of HIV-infected individuals with HIV protease inhibitor (HPI) drugs has significantly increased their life span. However, one of the side effects of HPI drugs is the development of premature atherosclerosis, whose molecular pathogenesis remains unclear. Previously we have reported that alpha-tocopherol (alpha-T) normalizes CD36 overexpression induced by ritonavir treatment ...
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Chadjichristos Christos E - - 2007
Atherosclerosis, the main cause of death and disability in adult populations of industrialized societies, is a multifactorial progressive process involving a variety of pathogenic mechanisms. Our current view on the pathogenesis of the disease implies complex patterns of interactions between a dysfunctional endothelium, leukocytes, and activated smooth muscle cells in ...
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Montecucco Fabrizio - - 2007
Atherogenesis is characterized by an intense inflammatory process, involving immune and vascular cells. These cells play a crucial role in all phases of atherosclerotic plaque formation and complication through cytokine, protease, and prothrombotic factor secretion. The accumulation of inflammatory cells and thus high amounts of soluble mediators are responsible for ...
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Horsnell William G C - - 2007
Interleukin 4 receptor alpha (IL-4Ralpha) is essential for effective clearance of gastrointestinal nematode infections. Smooth muscle cells are considered to play a role in the type 2 immune response-driven expulsion of gastrointestinal nematodes. Previous studies have shown in vitro that signal transducer and activator of transcription 6 signaling in response ...
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Abraham David - - 2007
A considerable amount of research time has been invested in studies aimed at elucidating pathogenic processes in systemic sclerosis (SSc). Despite this, major challenges for biomedical science remain, such as identification of the key factors that determine susceptibility to SSc, and elucidation of the precise nature of the initiating event ...
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Inoue Nobutaka - - 2006
Atherosclerosis is considered to be a chronic inflammatory disease. Vascular inflammation occurs in response to injury induced by various stimuli, such as oxidative stress, shear stress, infection, and so on. This concept is supported by the recent clinical findings that C-reactive protein (CRP) is an independent risk factor for coronary ...
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Arnal J F - - 2006
Whereas hormone replacement/menopause therapy (HRT) in postmenopausal women increases the coronary artery risk, epidemiological studies (protection in premenopaused women) suggest and experimental studies (prevention of the development of fatty streaks in animals) demonstrate a major atheroprotective action of oestradiol (E2). The understanding of the deleterious and beneficial effects of oestrogens ...
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Ramji D P - - 2006
The regulation of macrophage cholesterol homoeostasis is of crucial importance in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis, an underlying cause of heart attack and stroke. Several recent studies have revealed a critical role for the cytokine TGF-beta (transforming growth factor-beta), a key regulator of the immune and inflammatory responses, in atherogenesis. We ...
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Viral anti-inflammatory reagents: the potential for treatment of arthritic and vasculitic disorders.
Munuswamy-Ramanujam G - - 2006
Inflammatory and immune responses are inherent in the development of progressive arthritic or vasculitic disorders. Arthritis is frequently associated with accelerated forms of vasculitis; atherosclerosis being one form of accelerated vasculitis that blocks blood flow causing heart attacks and strokes. The arterial supply is central to maintaining normal articular function ...
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Selective clearance of macrophages in atherosclerotic plaques by the protein synthesis inhibitor ...
Croons Valerie - - 2007
Macrophages are an essential component of unstable atherosclerotic plaques and play a pivotal role in the destabilization process. We have demonstrated previously that local delivery of the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) inhibitor everolimus selectively clears macrophages in rabbit plaques. Because mTOR controls mRNA translation, inhibition of protein synthesis might ...
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Carratelli Caterina Romano - - 2007
Chlamydia pneumoniae, a gram-negative bacterium, is an important human intracellular pathogen; studies of C. pneumoniae pathogenesis have shown that the organism can infect many cell types associated with both respiratory and vascular sites, including arterial smooth muscle cells, macrophages and vascular endothelium. Recently, the recognition of atherosclerosis as an inflammatory ...
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Niessner Alexander - - 2006
BACKGROUND: Unstable atherosclerotic plaque is characterized by an infiltrate of inflammatory cells. Both macrophages and T cells have been implicated in mediating the tissue injury leading to plaque rupture; however, signals regulating their activation remain unidentified. Infectious episodes have been suspected to render plaques vulnerable to rupture. We therefore explored ...
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Redondo Santiago - - 2007
Both Angiotensin II and transforming growth factor beta-1 (TGF-beta1) are important mediators of vascular smooth muscle cell function and have been reported to mediate the balance between proliferation and apoptosis. Some crosstalk between Angiotensin II and TGF-beta1 in end-organ hypertension has been established. However, whether TGF-beta1 is able to mediate ...
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Koenig Wolfgang - - 2007
Basic research over the last two decades has identified a large number of molecules pertinent to the atherosclerotic process, which have clearly improved our understanding of the underlying pathology. It is now well established that inflammation represents a major feature which is present in the vessel wall throughout all stages ...
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Luo Dianhong - - 2006
We have previously shown that tumor necrosis factor (TNF) acts via its two receptors TNFR1 and TNFR2 to elicit distinct signaling pathways in vascular endothelial cells (ECs). Here we used a femoral artery ligation model to demonstrate that TNFR1-knockout (KO) mice had enhanced, whereas TNFR2-KO had reduced, capacity in clinical ...
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