Abstract-Atherosclerosis is associated with oxidative stress and inflammation, and upregulation of LOX-1, an endothelial receptor for oxidized LDL (oxLDL). Here, we describe generation of LOX-1 knockout (KO) mice in which binding of oxLDL to aortic endothelium was reduced and endothelium-dependent vasorelaxation preserved after treatment with oxLDL (PϽ0.01 versus wild-type mice). To address whether endothelial functional preservation might lead to reduction in atherogenesis, we crossed LOX-1 KO mice with LDLR KO mice and fed these mice 4% cholesterol/10% cocoa butter diet for 18 weeks. Atherosclerosis was found to cover 61Ϯ2% of aorta in the LDLR KO mice, but only 36Ϯ3% of aorta in the double KO mice. Luminal obstruction and intima thickness were significantly reduced in the double KO mice (versus LDLR KO mice). Expression of redox-sensitive NF-B and the inflammatory marker CD68 in LDLR KO mice was increased (PϽ0.01 versus wild-type mice), but not in the double KO mice. On the other hand, antiinflammatory cytokine IL-10 expression and superoxide dismutase activity were low in the LDLR KO mice (PϽ0.01 versus wild-type mice), but not in the double KO mice. Endothelial nitric oxide synthase expression was also preserved in the double KO mice. The proinflammatory signal MAPK P38 was activated in the LDLR KO mice, and LOX-1 deletion reduced this signal.
␣-Tocopherol transfer protein (␣-TTP) maintains the concentration of serum ␣-tocopherol (vitamin E), one of the most potent fat-soluble antioxidants, by facilitating ␣-tocopherol export from the liver. Mutations of the ␣-TTP gene are linked to ataxia with isolated vitamin E deficiency (AVED). We produced a model mouse of AVED by deleting the ␣-TTP gene, which showed ataxia and retinal degeneration after 1 year of age. Because the brain ␣-TTP functions in maintaining ␣-tocopherol levels in the brain, ␣-tocopherol was completely depleted in the ␣-TTP ؊͞؊ mouse brain, and the neurological phenotype of ␣-TTP ؊͞؊ mice is much more severe than that of wild-type mice when maintained on an ␣-tocopherol-deficient diet. Lipid peroxidation in ␣-TTP ؊͞؊ mice brains showed a significant increase, especially in degenerating neurons. ␣-Tocopherol supplementation suppressed lipid peroxidation and almost completely prevented the development of neurological symptoms. This therapy almost completely corrects the abnormalities in a mouse model of human neurodegenerative disease. Moreover, ␣-TTP ؊͞؊ mice may prove to be excellent animal models of delayed onset, slowly progressive neuronal degeneration caused by chronic oxidative stress.A taxia with isolated vitamin E deficiency (AVED) is an autosomal recessive disease, the phenotype of which is often indistinguishable from Friedreich ataxia (1), the most common hereditary ataxia in Europe and United States. We cloned the ␣-tocopherol transfer protein (␣-TTP) gene (2) and identified mutations on the ␣-TTP gene in patients with AVED (3, 4). Later, we found those same mutations on the ␣-TTP gene to be a cause of retinitis pigmentosa as well (5, 6). ␣-TTP is expressed in the brain and retina as well as in the liver, and its function still remains unclear (6, 7). Therefore, it is not known whether ␣-tocopherol deficiency is the only cause for neuronal degeneration of AVED. Here we produced a model mouse of AVED by deleting the ␣-TTP gene. The mice showed ataxia and retinal degeneration after 1 year of age, and these symptoms were reversed after ␣-tocopherol supplementation.The brain is thought to be particularly vulnerable to oxidative stress (8), and accumulating evidence suggests that oxidative stress is involved in the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative diseases including Alzheimer's disease and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (8,9). In animal models, neuronal cell death has been induced by free radical-producing chemicals, such as paraquat (10) or N-methy-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP; ref. 11), or by knocking out the manganese superoxide dismutase gene (12). These experimentally induced neuronal degenerations develop acutely within several days and differ therefore from the cell death that occurs in human neurodegenerative diseases, which are characterized by delayed onset and slow progression over years or decades. We discuss whether the ␣-TTP Ϫ͞Ϫ mouse serves as a mouse model of age-related neuronal degeneration arising from chronic oxidative stress. Materials and MethodsG...
Streptozotocin (STZ), a glucose analogue known to induce diabetes in experimental animals, causes DNA strand breaks and subsequent activation of poly(ADPribose) polymerase (Parp). Because Parp uses NAD as a substrate, extensive DNA damage will result in reduction of cellular NAD level. In fact, STZ induces NAD depletion and cell death in isolated pancreatic islets in vitro. Activation of Parp therefore is thought to play an important role in STZ-induced diabetes. In the present study, we established Parp-deficient (Parp ؊/؊ ) mice by disrupting Parp exon 1 by using the homologous recombination technique. These mice were used to examine the possible involvement of Parp in STZ-induced -cell damage in vivo. The wild-type (Parp ؉/؉ ) mice showed significant increases in blood glucose concentration from 129 mg͞dl to 218, 370, 477, and 452 mg͞dl on experimental days 1, 7, 21, and 60, respectively, after a single injection of 180 mg STZ͞kg body weight. In contrast, the concentration of blood glucose in Parp ؊/؊ mice remained normal up to day 7, slightly increased on day 21, but returned to normal levels on day 60. STZ injection caused extensive necrosis in the islets of Parp ؉/؉ mice on day 1, with subsequent progressive islet atrophy and loss of functional  cells from day 7. In contrast, the extent of islet -cell death and dysfunction was markedly less in Parp ؊/؊ mice. Our findings clearly implicate Parp activation in islet -cell damage and glucose intolerance induced by STZ in vivo.Various types of DNA damage produced by many environmental chemicals or reactive oxygen species generated by inflammatory reactions contribute to insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) through the induction of -cell death in pancreatic islets (1-3). Acute exposure to streptozotocin [2-deoxy-2-(3-methyl-3-nitrosourea)l-D-glucopyranose, STZ] induces massive -cell death and diabetes mellitus in experimental animals (4, 5). STZ also causes a rapid depletion of cellular NAD in islets (6-9), but this depletion is prevented by injection of nicotinamide immediately before or soon after the administration of STZ (10). Okamoto and colleagues (2, 11) demonstrated that STZ induces DNA strand breaks and activation of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (Parp) with subsequent reduction of NAD levels in the isolated pancreatic islets in vitro. These findings suggest the involvement of Parp as a key molecule in STZ-induced -cell death and diabetes through extensive poly(ADP-ribose) formation and NAD depletion, leading to reduction of ATP level and cell death. In agreement with this hypothesis, Parp inhibitors such as 3-aminobenzamide or nicotinamide prevent the depletion of NAD and induction of STZ-induced -cell death (12, 13). However, because Parp inhibitors possess other effects, such as scavenging hydrogen peroxide (14), it is not clear whether and how Parp activity contributes to -cell death and the development of diabetes in vivo. Thus, engineering of a Parp-deficient animal model would be useful for investigating the role of Parp in S...
␣-Tocopherol transfer protein (␣-TTP), a cytosolic protein that specifically binds ␣-tocopherol, is known as a product of the causative gene in patients with ataxia that is associated with vitamin E deficiency. Targeted disruption of the ␣-TTP gene revealed that ␣-tocopherol concentration in the circulation was regulated by ␣-TTP expression levels. Male ␣-TTP ؊/؊ mice were fertile; however, placentas of pregnant ␣-TTP ؊/؊ females were severely impaired with marked reduction of labyrinthine trophoblasts, and the embryos died at mid-gestation even when fertilized eggs of ␣-TTP ؉/؉ mice were transferred into ␣-TTP ؊/؊ recipients. The use of excess ␣-tocopherol or a synthetic antioxidant (BO-653) dietary supplement by ␣-TTP ؊/؊ females prevented placental failure and allowed full-term pregnancies. In ␣-TTP ؉/؉ animals, ␣-TTP gene expression was observed in the uterus, and its level transiently increased after implantation (4.5 days postcoitum). Our results suggest that oxidative stress in the labyrinth region of the placenta is protected by vitamin E during development and that in addition to the hepatic ␣-TTP, which governs plasma ␣-tocopherol level, the uterine ␣-TTP may also play an important role in supplying this vitamin.Vitamin E (␣-tocopherol) is the most potent lipid-soluble antioxidant in biological membranes, where it contributes to membrane stability. Patients with ataxia and isolated vitamin E deficiency (AVED) 1 have low or undetectable serum vitamin E concentrations and exhibit neurological dysfunction and muscular weakness. It is now established that ␣-tocopherol transfer protein (␣-TTP), a cytosolic liver protein known to specifically bind to ␣-tocopherol (1), is defective in AVED patients (2), indicating that ␣-TTP is a major determinant of plasma ␣-tocopherol level. Although ␣-tocopherol was initially identified as an anti-sterility factor to prevent abortion (3), the mechanism of action and the molecules responsible for its antisterility effect remain unknown. One of the reasons for this is that vitamin E is difficult to deplete from tissues and requires elaborate manipulations to cause deficiency symptoms to occur in experimental animals. In this study, we established a mouse model lacking ␣-TTP by targeted mutagenesis. This animal model for human AVED patients is suitable for examination of the complex pathophysiology of diseases associated with vitamin E deficiency and/or caused by oxidative stress. Here we examined the role of ␣-TTP in pregnancy and embryogenesis using our new animal model. MATERIALS AND METHODSGeneration of ␣-TTP Knockout Mice-An ␣-TTP targeting vector was constructed from an 8.8-kb ␣-TTP genome fragment encompassing exon 1. We inserted a fragment of PGK-neo cassette into the SmaI-SmaI site positioned 5Ј and 3Ј to exon 1 and flanked a 1.8-kb fragment of HSV-tk gene downstream of exon 2. AB2.2-Prime ES cells (Lexicon Genetics) or A3-1 ES (4) cells were transfected by electroporation with a linearized targeting vector. G418/gancyclovir-resistant clones were screened by PCR, and...
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