Aorta macrophage inflammatory and epigenetic changes in a murine model of obstructive sleep apnea: Potential role of CD36

Publication date

2018-09-03T10:54:51Z

2018-09-03T10:54:51Z

2017-02-27

2018-09-03T10:54:51Z

Abstract

Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) affects 8-10% of the population, is characterized by chronic intermittent hypoxia (CIH), and causally associates with cardiovascular morbidities. In CIH-exposed mice, closely mimicking the chronicity of human OSA, increased accumulation and proliferation of pro-inflammatory metabolic M1-like macrophages highly expressing CD36, emerged in aorta. Transcriptomic and MeDIP-seq approaches identified activation of pro-atherogenic pathways involving a complex interplay of histone modifications in functionally-relevant biological pathways, such as inflammation and oxidative stress in aorta macrophages. Discontinuation of CIH did not elicit significant improvements in aorta wall macrophage phenotype. However, CIH-induced aorta changes were absent in CD36 knockout mice, Our results provide mechanistic insights showing that CIH exposures during sleep in absence of concurrent pro-atherogenic settings (i.e., genetic propensity or dietary manipulation) lead to the recruitment of CD36(+)high macrophages to the aortic wall and trigger atherogenesis. Furthermore, long-term CIH-induced changes may not be reversible with usual OSA treatment.

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group

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Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1038/srep43648

Scientific Reports, 2017, vol. 7, p. 43648

https://doi.org/10.1038/srep43648

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cc-by (c) Cortese, Rene et al., 2017

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es

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