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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0850760 (
cardiovascular problem
)
23
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Deep venous thrombosis (DVT) remains a common and serious
cardiovascular problem
with both fatal and long-term consequences. The consequences of DVT include the development of postthrombotic syndrome in 25% to 60% of DVT patients. Despite the clinical importance of venous thrombus resolution, the cellular and molecular mediators involved are poorly understood, and currently there is no molecular therapy to accelerate this process. Several lines of evidence suggest that a complex and interrelated array of molecular signaling processes are involved in the inflammatory vascular remodeling associated with the resolution of DVT. Here, we have identified a role for the tumor suppressor gene
p53
in regulating venous thrombus resolution. Using the stasis model of venous thrombosis and resolution in mice, we found that genetic deficiency of
p53
or pharmacologic inhibition by pifithrin impairs thrombus resolution and is associated with increased fibrosis and altered expression of matrix metalloproteinase-2. The effect of
p53
loss was mediated by cells of the myeloid lineage, resulting in enhanced polarization of the cytokine milieu toward an M1-like phenotype. Furthermore, augmentation of
p53
activity using the pharmacological agonist of
p53
, quinacrine, accelerates venous thrombus resolution in a
p53
-dependent manner, even after establishment of thrombosis. Together, these studies define mechanisms by which
p53
regulates thrombus resolution by increasing inflammatory vascular remodeling of venous thrombi in vivo, and the potential therapeutic application of a
p53
agonist as a treatment to accelerate this process in patients with DVT.
...
PMID:Myeloid p53 regulates macrophage polarization and venous thrombus resolution by inflammatory vascular remodeling in mice. 2862 Jan 4