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Sai Kuchibhotla, Difernando Vanegas, David J. Kennedy, Ella Guy, George Nimako, Richard E. Morton, Maria Febbraio, Absence of CD36 protects against atherosclerosis in ApoE knock-out mice with no additional protection provided by absence of scavenger receptor A I/II, Cardiovascular Research, Volume 78, Issue 1, 1 April 2008, Pages 185–196, https://doi.org/10.1093/cvr/cvm093
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Abstract
The role of scavenger receptors in atherogenesis is controversial as a result of conflicting reports and a recent hypothesis suggesting that scavenger receptor absence would enhance the pro-inflammatory, pro-atherogenic milieu. This study addresses the effect of combined absence of scavenger receptors CD36 and SRA I/II on atherosclerosis lesion development in the apolipoprotein E knock-out (apoE°) model.
We created background-related strains of apoE°, scavenger receptor A I/II knock-out (SRA°)/apoE°, CD36 knock-out (CD36°)/apoE°, and CD36°/SRA°/apoE° mice that were >99% C57Bl/6. Four-week-old mice were fed a Western diet for 12 weeks and were assessed for lesion burden/morphology, risk factors for atherosclerosis, inflammatory mediators, and macrophage function.
There was a 61 and 74% decrease in total aortic lesion area in CD36°/apoE° males and females, respectively, compared with apoE° controls. The absence of SRA was protective (32% decrease in lesion) in female mice. The combined absence of CD36 and SRA provided no further protection in either gender. Macrophages from mice lacking CD36 had decreased pro-inflammatory characteristics and less migration to a pro-inflammatory stimulus. Plasma levels of cytokines/chemokines showed that CD36°/apoE° and CD36°/SRA°/apoE° mice had a less pro-inflammatory phenotype compared with apoE° and SRA°/apoE° mice. Oblivious mice in the apoE° background ruled out potential ‘passenger gene’ effects in the case of CD36.
These results provide new insights into the pro-atherogenic mechanisms of CD36 by implicating processes other than modified lipoprotein uptake.