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Aortic intimal resident macrophages are essential for maintenance of the non-thrombogenic intravascular state. Nat Cardiovasc Res 2022 Jan;1(1):67-84

Date

05/24/2022

Pubmed ID

35599984

Pubmed Central ID

PMC9121812

DOI

10.1038/s44161-021-00006-4

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-85133616554 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   16 Citations

Abstract

Leukocytes and endothelial cells frequently cooperate to resolve inflammatory events. In most cases, these interactions are transient in nature and triggered by immunological insults. Here, we report that in areas of disturbed blood flow, aortic endothelial cells permanently and intimately associate with a population of specialized macrophages that are recruited at birth from the closing ductus arteriosus and share the luminal surface with the endothelium becoming interwoven in the tunica intima. Anatomical changes that affect hemodynamics, like in patent ductus arteriosus, alter macrophage seeding to coincide with regions of disturbed flow. Aortic resident macrophages expand in situ via direct cell renewal. Induced-depletion of intimal macrophages led to thrombin-mediated endothelial cell contraction, progressive fibrin accumulation and formation of microthrombi that, once dislodged, caused blockade of vessels in several organs. Together the findings revealed that intravascular resident macrophages are essential to regulate thrombin activity and clear fibrin deposits in regions of disturbed blood flow.

Author List

Hernandez GE, Ma F, Martinez G, Firozabadi NB, Salvador J, Juang LJ, Leung J, Zhao P, López DA, Ardehali R, Beaudin AE, Kastrup CJ, Pellegrini M, Flick MJ, Iruela-Arispe ML

Author

Christian Kastrup PhD Professor in the Surgery department at Medical College of Wisconsin