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Marfan syndrome (MFS) is a connective tissue disorder in which aortic rupture is the major cause of death. MFS patients with an aortic diameter below the advised limit for prophylactic surgery (<5 cm) may unexpectedly experience an aortic dissection or rupture, despite yearly monitoring. Hence, there is a clear need for improved prognostic markers to predict such aortic events. We hypothesize that elastin fragments play a causal role in aortic calcification in MFS, and that microcalcification serves as a marker for aortic disease severity. To address this hypothesis, we analysed MFS patient and mouse aortas. MFS patient aortic tissue showed enhanced microcalcification in areas with extensive elastic lamina fragmentation in the media. A causal relationship between medial injury and microcalcification was revealed by studies in vascular smooth muscle cells (SMCs); elastin peptides were shown to increase the activity of the calcification marker alkaline phosphatase (ALP) and reduce the expression of the calcification inhibitor matrix GLA protein in human SMCs. In murine Fbn1 MFS aortic SMCs, Alpl mRNA and activity were upregulated as compared with wild-type SMCs. The elastin peptide-induced ALP activity was prevented by incubation with lactose or a neuraminidase inhibitor, which inhibit the elastin receptor complex, and a mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase-1/2 inhibitor, indicating downstream involvement of extracellular signal-regulated kinase-1/2 (ERK1/2) phosphorylation. Histological analyses in MFS mice revealed macrocalcification in the aortic root, whereas the ascending aorta contained microcalcification, as identified with the near-infrared fluorescent bisphosphonate probe OsteoSense-800. Significantly, microcalcification correlated strongly with aortic diameter, distensibility, elastin breaks, and phosphorylated ERK1/2. In conclusion, microcalcification co-localizes with aortic elastin degradation in MFS aortas of humans and mice, where elastin-derived peptides induce a calcification process in SMCs via the elastin receptor complex and ERK1/2 activation. We propose microcalcification as a novel imaging marker to monitor local elastin degradation and thus predict aortic events in MFS patients. Copyright © 2017 Pathological Society of Great Britain and Ireland. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Objective— In aortic aneurysms the arterial vessel wall is dilated because of destruction of its integrity, which may lead to lethal vessel rupture. Chronic infiltration of inflammatory cells into the vessel wall is fundamental to aneurysm pathology. We aim to limit aneurysm growth by inhibition of inflammation and reducing endothelial cell (EC) activation with immunosuppressive drug azathioprine (Aza). Approach and Results— Aza and its metabolite 6-mercaptopurine have anti-inflammatory effects on leukocytes. We here demonstrate that treatment of ECs with 6-mercaptopurine inhibits cell activation as illustrated by reduced expression of interleukin-12, CCL5, CCL2, and vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 and inhibition of monocyte–EC adhesion. The underlying mechanism of 6-mercaptopurine involves suppression of GTPase Rac1 activation, resulting in reduced phosphorylation of c-Jun-terminal-N-kinase and c-Jun. Subsequently, the effect of Aza was investigated in aneurysm formation in the angiotensin II aneurysm mouse model in apolipoprotein E–deficient mice. We demonstrated that Aza decreases de novo aortic aneurysm formation from an average aneurysm severity score of 2.1 (control group) to 0.6 (Aza group), and that Aza effectively delays aorta pathology in a progression experiment, resulting in a reduced severity score from 2.8 to 1.7 in Aza-treated mice. In line with the in vitro observations, Aza-treated mice showed less c-Jun-terminal-N-kinase activation in ECs and reduced leukocyte influx in the aortic wall. Conclusions— The immunosuppressive drug Aza has an anti-inflammatory effect and in ECs inhibits Rac1 and c-Jun-terminal-N-kinase activation, which may explain the protective effect of Aza in aneurysm development and, most importantly for clinical implications, aneurysm severity.
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