Edinburgh Research Archive

Role of intra-cellular glucocorticoid regulation in vascular lesion development

dc.contributor.advisor
Walker, Brian
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dc.contributor.advisor
Hadoke, Patrick W.F.
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dc.contributor.author
Iqbal, Javaid
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dc.contributor.sponsor
British Heart Foundation
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dc.date.accessioned
2011-02-15T10:16:54Z
dc.date.available
2011-02-15T10:16:54Z
dc.date.issued
2010
dc.description.abstract
Atherosclerosis and post-angioplasty neointimal proliferation, which are leading causes of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality, develop as a result of chronic or acute vascular injury producing inflammatory and proliferative responses in the vessel wall. Glucocorticoids, the stress hormones produced by the adrenal cortex, have anti-inflammatory and anti-proliferative characteristics and can also influence systemic cardiovascular risk factors. The systemic levels of these hormones are controlled by the hypothalamic pituitary adrenal axis. However, there is also a tissue-specific pre-receptor regulation of these hormones by the two isozymes of 11β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (11β-HSD); type 1 regenerates active glucocorticoids within the cells and type 2 inactivates glucocorticoids. Whilst it has been shown that the inhibition of 11β-HSD1 has favourable effect on cardiovascular risk factors and the inhibition of 11β-HSD2 results in hypertension; the effect of these enzymes on vascular lesion development is not known. The work described in this thesis tested the hypothesis that 11β-HSD1 inhibition reduces vascular lesion development due to improvement in cardiovascular risk factors, whereas 11β-HSD2 inhibition leads to adverse vascular remodelling. Apolipoprotein-E deficient (ApoE-/-) mice fed on western diet were used to study atherosclerosis, whereas neointimal proliferation was investigated using a well-established mouse model of wire-angioplasty. Vascular lesions were assessed using novel imaging and standard histological techniques. 11β-HSD1 inhibition reduced the size of atherosclerotic lesions and improved markers of plaque stability with a reduction in lipid content and increase in collagen content of the plaques. This was associated with a reduction in weight gain and blood pressure but without any effect on lipid profile. 11β-HSD1 inhibition did not produce any significant effect on neointimal proliferation in C57Bl/6J mice. However in ApoE-/- mice, 11β-HSD1 inhibition reduced neointimal proliferation with corresponding increase in size of patent lumen and with an associated reduction in macrophage content of neointimal lesions. 11β-HSD2 deletion produced an outward remodelling in un-injured vessels but there was no effect on neointimal proliferation after wire-angioplasty. Administration of a selective mineralocorticoid antagonist, eplerenone, reduced neointimal lesions significantly but to a similar degree in both C57Bl/6J and 11β-HSD2-/- mice, associated with a significant reduction in macrophage content of lesions but without any effect on blood pressure. Data in this thesis highlight the potential therapeutic application of 11β-HSD1 inhibition in reducing the size and vulnerability of atherosclerotic plaques and also reduction in neointimal proliferation (and hence post-angioplasty restenosis) in high risk patients with „metabolic syndrome‟ phenotype. The results also indicate that 11β-HSD2 has a limited, if any, role to play in the development of neointimal lesions.
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dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/4810
dc.language.iso
en
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
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dc.relation.hasversion
Hadoke PW, Iqbal J, & Walker BR (2009) Therapeutic manipulation of glucocorticoid metabolism in cardiovascular disease, British Journal of Pharmacology, 156, 689-712.
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dc.relation.hasversion
Iqbal J, Fox KAA (2010) Epidemiological trends in acute coronary syndromes: Understanding the past to predict and improve the future, Arch Med Sci 2010, 6 (1A), S3-S14.
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dc.subject
atherosclerosis
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dc.subject
neointimal proliferation
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glucocorticoids
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11β-HSD1
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eplerenone
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dc.title
Role of intra-cellular glucocorticoid regulation in vascular lesion development
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
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