Administration of an LXR agonist promotes atherosclerotic lesion remodelling in murine inflammatory arthritis.
Dragana Dragoljevic; Man Kit Sam Lee; Gerard Pernes; Pooranee K Morgan; Cynthia Louis; Waled Shihata; Kevin Huynh; Arina A Kochetkova; Patrick W Bell; Natalie A Mellett; Peter J Meikle; Graeme I Lancaster; Michael J Kraakman; Prabhakara R Nagareddy; Beatriz Y Hanaoka; Ian P Wicks; Andrew J Murphy
Abstract
The leading cause of mortality in patients with rheumatoid arthritis is atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (CVD). We have shown that murine arthritis impairs atherosclerotic lesion regression, because of cellular cholesterol efflux defects in haematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs), causing monocytosis and impaired atherosclerotic regression. Therefore, we hypothesised that improving cholesterol efflux using a Liver X Receptor (LXR) agonist would improve cholesterol efflux and improve atherosclerotic lesion regression in arthritis. mice were fed a western-type diet for 14 weeks to initiate atherogenesis, then switched to a chow diet to induce lesion regression and divided into three groups; (1) control, (2) K/BxN serum transfer inflammatory arthritis (K/BxN) or (3) K/BxN arthritis and LXR agonist T0901317 daily for 2 weeks.LdlrLXR activation during murine inflammatory arthritis completely restored atherosclerotic lesion regression in arthritic mice, evidenced by reduced lesion size, macrophage abundance and lipid content. Mechanistically, serum from arthritic mice promoted foam cell formation, demonstrated by increased cellular lipid accumulation in macrophages and paralleled by a reduction in mRNA of the cholesterol efflux transporters , and . T0901317 reduced lipid loading and increased and expression in macrophages exposed to arthritic serum and increased ABCA1 levels in atherosclerotic lesions of arthritic mice. Moreover, arthritic clinical score was also attenuated with T0901317.Abca1Taken together, we show that the LXR agonist T0901317 rescues impaired atherosclerotic lesion regression in murine arthritis because of enhanced cholesterol efflux transporter expression and reduced foam cell development in atherosclerotic lesions.
Journal | CLINICAL & TRANSLATIONAL IMMUNOLOGY |
ISSN | 2050-0068 |
Published | 01 Jan 2023 |
Volume | 12 |
Issue | 4 |
Pages | e1446 e1446 |
DOI | 10.1002/cti2.1446 |
Type | Journal Article |
Sponsorship | NHMRC: 1194329 |