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Submitted on November 21, 2007
From the Hughes Medical Institute, Chevy Chase, Md (G.P.K.); and the Department of Health and Human Services, National Institutes of Health, National Heart Lung and Blood Institute, Laboratory of Cardiac Energetics (J.L.S., R.S.B.) and Vascular Medicine Branch (M.J.A., A.T.R.), Bethesda, Md. * To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: rsb{at}nih.gov.
Background—Extracellular deposition of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) in the arterial wall is an essential early step in atherosclerosis. This process preferentially occurs at arterial branch points, reflecting a regional variation in lipoprotein–arterial wall interactions. In this study, we characterized the submicron microstructure of arterial wall collagen and elastin to evaluate its potential role in regional LDL deposition. Methods and Results—With 2-photon microscopy, we used the intrinsic optical properties of collagen and elastin to determine the arterial wall macromolecular microstructure in fresh porcine and murine arteries. This optical approach generated unique nondestructive en face 3-dimensional views of the wall. The collagen/elastin microstructure was found to vary with the topology of the arterial bed. A nearly confluent elastin surface layer was present throughout but was missing at atherosclerosis-susceptible branch points, exposing dense collagen-proteoglycan complexes. In LDL binding studies, this luminal elastin layer limited LDL penetration, whereas its absence at the branches resulted in extensive LDL binding. Furthermore, LDL colocalized with proteoglycans with a sigmoidal dose dependence (inflection point, Conclusions—This optical sectioning approach provided a robust 3-dimensional collagen/elastin microstructure of the arterial wall in fresh samples. At atherosclerosis-susceptible vascular branch points, the absence of a luminal elastin barrier and the presence of a dense collagen/proteoglycan matrix contribute to increased retention of LDL.
Accepted on April 1, 2008
Contribution of Macromolecular Structure to the Retention of Low-Density Lipoprotein at Arterial Branch Points
Gina P. Kwon BS,
130 mg LDL/dL). Ionic strength and competing anions studies were consistent with the initial interaction of LDL with proteoglycans to be electrostatic in nature.
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