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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (Mol)
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Investigation of the extracellular matrix composition of the left heart ventricle was carried out on autopsy material of subjects, aged from 60 to 70 years, in a number of cases, including: (1) tissue without cardiosclerosis; (2) granulation tissue formed 2 weeks after infarction; (3) post-infarctial fibrous scars; (4) diffuse cardiosclerosis in consequence of stenotic coronary atherosclerosis. Cryostat sections treated with highly specific antibodies to fibronectin and types I, III, IV and V collagens were examined by the indirect immunofluorescence technique. Fibronectin and the mentioned collagenous proteins were detected in the extracellular matrix of granulation tissue. In contrast, fibronectin and collagen type IV were not revealed in post-infarctial fibrous scars. Collagen types III and V were diffusely distributed in fibrous tissue, whereas collagen type I was demonstrated to accumulate preferentially in the deeper regions of post-infarctial scars. Fibronectin and collagen types I, III, V, but never type IV, were also found in the connective tissue in diffuse cardiosclerosis. The significance of type V collagen in the extracellular matrix is discussed.
J Mol Cell Cardiol 1988 Jun
PMID:Participance of fibronectin and various collagen types in the formation of fibrous extracellular matrix in cardiosclerosis. 306 29

Aging is the progressive accumulation of changes with time that are responsible for the ever-increasing likelihood of disease and death. These irreversible changes are attributed to the aging process. This process is now the major cause of death in the developed countries. This fact is obscured by the protean nature of the contributions of this process to the events which terminate life. The aging process may be due to free radical reactions. This theory is supported by: 1) studies on the origin and evolution of life; 2) the numerous studies of the effect of ionizing radiation on living systems; 3) life span experiments in which the diet was modified so as to alter endogenous free radical reaction levels; 4) the plausible explanations it provides for aging phenomena; and 5) the growing number of studies which implicate free radical reactions in the pathogenesis of specific diseases. The relationship between aging and diseases involving free radical reactions seems to be a direct one. Modulation of the normal distribution of deleterious free radical reaction-induced changes throughout the body by genetic and environmental differences between individuals results in patterns of change, in some sufficiently different from the normal aging pattern to be recognized as disease. The growing number of 'free radical' diseases includes the two major causes of death, cancer and atherosclerosis. It is reasonable to expect on the basis of present data that a judicious selection of diets and antioxidant supplements will increase the healthy, active life span by 5-10 or more years.
Mol Cell Biochem 1988 Dec
PMID:Free radicals in aging. 306 21

The effect of hypertension, hyperlipidemia, and the combination of both on acute and chronic myocardial ischemia were evaluated in a total of 30 male rabbits. After preliminary hypertension and/or hyperlipidemic load by loading of the abdominal aorta and/or cholesterol feeding, acute ischemia was produced by clipping of the left coronary artery. The banding produced elevation of carotid arterial pressure and left ventricular hypertrophy. Cholesterol feeding resulted in severe atheromatous changes in all sizes of coronary arteries. The intimal thickening was due to foam cell accumulation in all arteries examined. Animals pretreated with the combination of hypertension and hyperlipidemia displayed the most severe cardiolmegaly with advanced coronary atherosclerosis and chronic ischemic lesions of the myocardium, i.e., perivascular patchy fibrosis in the subendocardial area. Furthermore, electron microscopic detection of ultrastructural myocardial damage, involving glycogen depletion, sarcoplasmic edema, mitochondrial swelling, and contractile abnormalities, was also most frequent in this group. These changes were quantitated using the ischemic score. These results confirm the hypothesis that fatal ischemic injuries may occur clinically in human hearts with coronary insufficiency due to coexistence of hypertensive cardiomegaly and severe coronary atherosclerosis. They offer a model for further study of these combined effects.
Exp Mol Pathol 1985 Apr
PMID:An ultrastructural study on ischemic lesions in rabbits' hearts with pressure overload and hyperlipidemia. 315 60

The effects of activation of the phagocytic system by BCG on the development of diet-induced atherosclerosis was studied in chicken. Injections of BCG had a marked effect on atherogenesis, which was either inhibitory or stimulatory, depending on the route of BCG administration and on the timing. A slight, but significant inhibition was obtained by intraperitoneal injection of BCG administered during the dietary treatment. A more pronounced and significant inhibition was observed in chicks given BCG subcutaneously 8 weeks before the start of the dietary regimen. The findings are consistent with a previously proposed notion that immunization at an early age may affect the course of later life atherosclerosis.
Exp Mol Pathol 1988 Dec
PMID:Phagocytic system stimulation in experimental atherosclerosis of chicks. 319 11

Rabbits fed an atherogenic diet for 60 days resulted in high levels of plasma lipid peroxides as well as extreme hypercholesterolemia. Both levels stayed high until 35 days after the atherogenic diet stopped. At the same time, plasma PGI2 level was remarkably decreased while TXA2 and platelet aggregability were increased. Atherosclerotic aortas contain high levels of lipid peroxides associated with decreased PGI2 and increased TXA2 generation. Atherosclerotic plaques had the highest level of lipid peroxides and TXA2 while PGI2 production was the least, as compared with nonplaque tissue of the same artery and the normal arteries. The condition of normal arteries was just the reverse. There was a negative correlation between lipid peroxides and prostacyclin production, and a positive correlation between lipid peroxides and TXA2, in both plasma and aorta of rabbits. These results suggest that there is a close correlation between atherosclerosis, elevated lipid peroxides, and disturbances in PGI2/TXA2 balances.
Exp Mol Pathol 1988 Apr
PMID:Effects of lipid peroxides on prostacyclin and thromboxane generation in hypercholesterolemic rabbits. 328 Mar 42

Lysosomal changes have been implicated as one of the major factors contributing to the progression and complications of atherosclerosis, and recently foam cell formation has been correlated with increases in several acid hydrolases. To explore at the subcellular level relationships among lesion progression, cellular lipid accumulation, and lysosomal change, atherosclerotic lesions from hypercholesterolemic White Carneau pigeons have been studied through combined ultrastructural cytochemistry and stereo (three-dimensional) high-voltage electron microscopy. Lysosomal enzyme activity in the prelesion intima and in foam cells of early lesions was in discrete lysosomes of macrophage foam cells. Foam cell lipid at the early stages was primarily (72%) in cytoplasmic droplets, which formed a three-dimensional network with the small (0.25-0.8 microM in diameter), reaction-positive lysosomes suspended at the vertices of a cytoplasmic lattice that delineated individual lipid pools. Concomitant with lesion progression and increasing complexity, foam cell lysosome number, size, and complexity increased. The complexity was characterized by lysosome lipid accumulation (60% of cell lipid) and the fusion of lysosomes to form multilobulated organelles in which the acid phosphatase reaction product typically was circumferential to the lysosomal lipid core. The involvement of lysosomes climaxed in the more advanced region of lesions with foam cells in which the bulk of cytoplasmic volume was occupied by large (15-20 microM in diameter), multicompartmental, lipid-containing lysosomes. It is suggested that this progressive involvement of lysosomes is responsible for cell and tissue necroses characteristic of advanced lesions.
Exp Mol Pathol 1988 Feb
PMID:Lysosomal alterations during coronary atherosclerosis in the pigeon: correlative cytochemical and three-dimensional HVEM/IVEM observations. 333 48

In separate experiments, we fed 30 male and 25 female baboons a diet enriched in cholesterol and saturated fat for periods of 3.3 and 2.6 years. Using operant conditioning with water rewards, we trained the animals to puff on smoking machines in a human-like manner. Half of the animals smoked more than 40 cigarettes per day, while the remaining animals (controls) puffed air. Initially, the diet produced twofold (males) and threefold (females) elevations from baseline levels in serum cholesterol concentrations, but over the course of the experiments, the serum cholesterol decreased to 1.5 (males) and 2.0 (females) times baseline levels in both cigarette smokers and controls. Blood carbon monoxide concentration, plasma thiocyanate concentration, and urine cotinine concentration were significantly greater in smokers than in controls. Responses to smoking in males included lymphocytosis, elevated fasting blood glucose concentration, and decreased seminal vesicle weight. In females, hemoglobin and mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentrations were elevated. The extent of atherosclerosis was examined after 2.8 (males) and 1.6 (females) years of smoking. Among males, the extent of lesions in carotid arteries was significantly greater in smokers than in controls, but there were no significant differences in atherosclerosis in the aorta or the brachial, iliac-femoral, or coronary arteries. Among females, there were no significant differences in atherosclerosis between smokers and controls in any artery. These experiments show little effect of 2 to 3 years of cigarette smoke inhalation and concurrent modest elevation of blood carboxyhemoglobin on experimental atherosclerosis in the presence of moderate hyperlipidemia.
Exp Mol Pathol 1988 Feb
PMID:Cigarette smoking, dietary hyperlipidemia, and experimental atherosclerosis in the baboon. 333 49

In eight New Zealand white male rabbits the abdominal aorta and one iliofemoral artery was balloon deendothelialized (group A). After 2 weeks they were kept for 6 weeks on a high cholesterol diet together with eight unoperated rabbits (group B). Eight more rabbits were kept on a commercial diet only (group C). The degree of atherosclerosis was much higher in the deendothelialized Group A vessels than in the uninjured group B vessels. The activity of lactate dehydrogenase and of the rate-limiting glycolytic pyruvate kinase was significantly increased and the activity of lipoamide dehydrogenase decreased in the group A aortas. In the iliofemoral arteries a similar but statistically insignificant tendency was detected. There was no significant difference, however, in aortic lactate between the three groups. Thus, local hypoxia did not significantly contribute to the high degree of atherosclerosis in the group A animals in spite of the enzyme activity differences. Previous experience of the authors, using arterial microcathode pO2 measurements, indicates that following deendothelialization an adaptive proliferation of nutrient vessels and increased arterial oxygenation takes place. The average activity of the lysosomal N-acetyl-beta-glucosaminidase was five times and that of beta-glucuronidase, seven times higher in the Group A than Group B aortas; in the iliofemoral arteries the differences were even larger. The huge elevation of these hydrolases, which are involved in glycosaminoglycan catabolism, provides indirect indication that accumulation of glycosaminoglycans and possibly their ability to form complexes with apoB-containing lipoproteins played a major role in the much increased degree of atherosclerotic lesions in the Group A rabbits.
Exp Mol Pathol 1988 Apr
PMID:The effect of combined deendothelialization and hypercholesterolemia on some arterial lysosomal and glycolytic enzymes and lactate in rabbits. 335 Jan 45

The clonal nature of atherosclerotic plaques has been examined in diet-induced atherosclerosis of interspecies hybrid hare females (Lepus timidus (female) X Lepus europaeus (male], which exhibit genetic mosaicism with respect to glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6P-D). Four diet groups have been used: control pellet diet, hyperlipemic (HL) diet, and HL diet supplemented with two different concentrations of 25-hydroxycholesterol. Lesion and nonlesion tissue samples and primary cultures developed from similar samples were used to determine the G6P-D variant patterns. A close correlation was observed, using regression analysis, between the in vivo and the in vitro phenotype. As has been reported earlier by us, most lesions in this animal model were heterozygous and the few homozygous areas recorded were all in the diet groups supplemented with 25-hydroxycholesterol. However, in tissue culture, homozygosity appeared with greater frequency, still of the T phenotype. In order to rule out maternal dominance as a factor, preliminary experiments involving G6P-D analysis have been carried out using tissue samples and cell cultures derived from a reverse cross. These also show a strong bias toward the T phenotype. The studies presented here highlight the difficulties in interpretation using G6P-D analysis as the sole criterion to determine the clonal nature of the atherosclerotic plaques. It also seems likely that the kind of diet given to induce atherosclerosis might influence the nature of the clonal growth. Studies using transfection are essential to determine whether transforming sequences are present in atherosclerotic lesions.
Exp Mol Pathol 1988 Jun
PMID:Clonal nature of atherosclerotic plaques. 337 61

In a trauma model of atherosclerosis (repeated mechanical injury of the rabbit ear artery), rabbits were pretreated either with etoposid (inducing a monocytopenia) or with prednisolone (inhibiting monocyte function) to investigate the role of monocytes in traumatically induced plaque formation. Three weeks after the last injury the arteries were carefully examined. While a profound monocytopenia during the period of injuries did not at all influence the size of the plaque formation, this was almost completely inhibited in the prednisolone-treated rabbits. Obviously, the effect of prednisolone must be attributed to other pharmacological properties. Monocytes appear to be of less importance in purely trauma atherosclerosis models.
Exp Mol Pathol 1988 Aug
PMID:Effect of monocytopenia on trauma-induced atherosclerotic lesions in the rabbit ear artery. 339 69


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