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Accelerated Atherosclerosis, Aortic Aneurysm Formation, and Ischemic Heart Disease in Apolipoprotein E/Endothelial Nitric Oxide Synthase Double-Knockout Mice
620
Citations
28
References
2001
Year
The study tests whether endothelial nitric oxide synthase deficiency accelerates atherosclerosis in apolipoprotein E knockout mice. Lesion formation was compared between apoE/eNOS‑double knockout and apoE‑knockout mice after 16 weeks on a Western‑type diet. ApoE/eNOS‑double knockout mice exhibited markedly increased atherosclerotic lesions, widespread coronary arteriosclerosis with myocardial fibrosis, left‑ventricular hypertrophy and dysfunction, hypertension, and spontaneous abdominal aortic aneurysms and dissections, establishing a novel murine model of coronary disease and heart failure.
Background To test whether deficiency in endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) affects atherosclerosis development, we compared lesion formation in apolipoprotein E (apoE)/eNOS-double knockout (DKO) and apoE-knockout (KO) control animals. Methods and Results After 16 weeks of “Western-type” diet, apoE/eNOS-DKO males and females showed significant increases in lesion area of 93.6% and 59.2% compared with apoE-KO mice. All apoE/eNOS-DKO animals studied developed peripheral coronary arteriosclerosis, associated with perivascular and myocardial fibrosis, whereas none of the apoE-KO mice did. Transthoracic echocardiography showed a significantly increased left ventricular wall thickness and decreased fractional shortening in DKO animals. Mean arterial pressure was increased in DKO mice and was comparable in degree to eNOS-KO animals. Male DKO animals developed atherosclerotic abdominal aneurysms and aortic dissection. Conclusions eNOS deficiency increases atherosclerosis in Western-type diet-fed apoE-KO animals and introduces coronary disease and an array of cardiovascular complications, including spontaneous aortic aneurysm and dissection. This phenotype constitutes the first murine model to demonstrate distal coronary arteriosclerosis associated with evidence of myocardial ischemia, infarction, and heart failure. Hypertrophy and reduced left ventricular function cannot be explained by increased blood pressure alone, because eNOS-KO animals do not develop these complications.
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