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      Vascular gene expression in mice overexpressing human endothelin-1 targeted to the endothelium.

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          Abstract

          Endothelin (ET)-1 plays an important pathophysiological role in several vascular diseases including hypertension and atherosclerosis. Transgenic mice overexpressing human preproET-1 selectively in the endothelium (eET-1) exhibit vascular injury in the absence of blood pressure elevation. ET-1 overexpression may induce vascular injury by inducing changes in gene expression. To understand mechanisms whereby ET-1 induces vascular damage, vascular gene expression profiling was performed using DNA microarrays. RNA from mesenteric arteries of male and female young (6-7 wk) and mature (6-8 mo) eET-1 and wild-type (WT) mice was isolated, and changes in gene expression were determined by genome-wide expression profiling using Illumina microarray and FlexArray software. Data were analyzed using a relaxed and a stringent statistical approach. The gene lists were compared and analyzed as well with Ingenuity Pathway Analysis. The most common change was an increase in the expression of lipid metabolism genes. Four of these genes were validated by qPCR, cyp51, dgat2, and scd1 genes in young and elovl6 in both young and mature male mice, supporting a role of ET-1 in atherosclerosis. To test the hypothesis that ET-1 participates in mechanisms leading to atherosclerosis, we crossed eET-1 with atherosclerosis-prone apoE(-/-) mice to determine whether ET-1 overexpression exacerbates high-fat diet (HFD)-induced atherosclerosis using oil red O staining of descending thoracic aorta. HFD increased lipid plaques by 3-, 27-, and 86-fold in eET-1, apoE(-/-), and crossed mice, respectively, vs. WT. This suggests that increased endothelial ET-1 expression results in early changes in gene expression in the vascular wall that enhance lipid biosynthesis and accelerate progression of atherosclerosis.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Physiol. Genomics
          Physiological genomics
          American Physiological Society
          1531-2267
          1094-8341
          Feb 11 2011
          : 43
          : 3
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Vascular and Hypertension Research Unit, Lady Davis Institute for Medical Research, McGill University, Montréal, Québec, Canada.
          Article
          physiolgenomics.00218.2009
          10.1152/physiolgenomics.00218.2009
          21045115
          50d83c24-ccbc-429a-a243-2dd7bc4fb856
          History

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