Anatomical model of human heart. Until now,
doctors have believed that smooth muscle cells -- the cells that help
blood vessels contract and dilate -- were the good guys in the body's
battle against atherosclerotic plaque. (Stock image)
Credit: © snike / Fotolia
Doctors' efforts to battle the dangerous
atherosclerotic plaques that build up in our arteries and cause heart
attacks and strokes are built on several false beliefs about the
fundamental composition and formation of the plaques, new research from
the University of Virginia School of Medicine shows. These new
discoveries will force researchers to reassess their approaches to
developing treatments and discard some of their basic assumptions about
atherosclerosis, commonly known as hardening of the arteries.
"The leading cause of death worldwide is complications of
atherosclerosis, and the most common end-stage disease is when an
atherosclerotic plaque ruptures. If this occurs in one of your large
coronary arteries, it's a catastrophic event," said Gary K. Owens, PhD,
of UVA's Robert M. Berne Cardiovascular Research Center. "Once a plaque
ruptures, it can induce formation of a large clot that can block blood
flow to the downstream regions. This is what causes most heart attacks.
The clot can also dislodge and cause a stroke if it lodges in a blood
vessel in the brain. As such, understanding what controls the stability
of plaques is extremely important. "
Until now, doctors have believed that smooth muscle cells -- the
cells that help blood vessels contract and dilate -- were the good guys
in the body's battle against atherosclerotic plaque. They were thought
to migrate from their normal location in the blood vessel wall into the
developing atherosclerotic plaque, where they would attempt to wall off
the accumulating fats, dying cells and other nasty components of the
plaque. The dogma has been that the more smooth muscle cells in that
wall -- particularly in the innermost layer referred to as the "fibrous
cap" -- the more stable the plaque is and the less danger it poses.
UVA's research reveals those notions are woefully incomplete at best.
Scientists have grossly misjudged the number of smooth muscle cells
inside the plaques, the work shows, suggesting the cells are not just
involved in forming a barrier so much as contributing to the plaque
itself. "We suspected there was a small number of smooth muscle cells we
were failing to identify using the typical immunostaining detection
methods. It wasn't a small number. It was 82 percent," Owens said.
"Eighty-two percent of the smooth muscle cells within advanced
atherosclerotic lesions cannot be identified using the typical
methodology since the lesion cells down-regulate smooth muscle cell
markers. As such, we have grossly underestimated how many smooth muscle
cells are in the lesion."
Suddenly, the role of smooth muscle cells is much more complex, much
less black-and-white. Are they good or bad? Should treatments try to
encourage more? It's no longer that simple, and the problem is made all
the more complicated by the fact that some smooth muscle cells were
being misidentified as immune cells called macrophages, while some
macrophage-derived cells were masquerading as smooth muscle cells. It's
very confusing, even for scientists, and it has led to what Owens called
"complete ambiguity as to which cell is which within the lesion." (The
research also shows other subsets of smooth muscle cells were
transitioning to cells resembling stem cells and myofibroblasts.)
Researcher Laura S. Shankman, a PhD student in the Owens lab, was
able to overcome the limitations of the traditional methodology for
detecting smooth muscle cells in the plaque. Her approach was to
genetically tag smooth muscle cells early in their development, so she
could follow them and their descendants even if they changed their
stripes. "This allowed us to mark smooth muscle cells when we were
confident that they were actually smooth muscle cells," she said. "Then
we let the atherosclerosis develop and progress [in mice] in order to
see where those cells were later in disease."
Further, Shankman identified a key gene, Klf4, that appears to
regulate these transitions of smooth muscle cells. Remarkably, when she
genetically knocked out Klf4 selectively in smooth muscle cells, the
atherosclerotic plaques shrank dramatically and exhibited features
indicating they were more stable -- the ideal therapeutic goal for
treating the disease in people. Of major interest, loss of Klf4 in
smooth muscle cells did not reduce the number of these cells in lesions
but resulted in them undergoing transitions in their functional
properties that appear to be beneficial in disease pathogenesis. That
is, it switched them from being "bad" guys to "good" guys.
Taken together, Shankman's findings raise many critical questions
about previous studies built on techniques that failed to assess the
composition of the lesions accurately. Moreover, her studies are the
first to indicate that therapies targeted at controlling the properties
of smooth muscle cells within lesions may be highly effective in
treating a disease that is the leading cause of death worldwide.
The discoveries have been outlined in a paper published online by the journal Nature Medicine.
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