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Thomas H. Langenickel, Michelle Olive, Manfred Boehm, Hong San, Martin F. Crook, Elizabeth G. Nabel
Published in Volume 118, Issue 12
J Clin Invest. 2008; 118(12):3848–3859 doi:10.1172/JCI33206
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Figure 4
Role of inflammation in KIS–/– lesion formation.

(A) Immunohistochemistry demonstrated increased recruitment of T cells (CD3+) to the site of lesion in KIS–/– mice, predominantly located to neointima (7 days after injury) and adventitia (7 and 14 days after injury). Arrows denote internal elastica. (B) Immunohistochemistry demonstrated no marked difference in macrophage (F4/80+) recruitment to the site of lesions between KIS+/+ and KIS–/– mice. Arrows denote internal elastica. (C and D) KIS–/–Rag–/– mice demonstrated the same excessive neointima formation as did KIS–/–Rag+/+ mice, demonstrated by representative H&E-stained sections (C; arrows denote internal elastica) and quantification of intima/media area ratios (D; P = NS; n = 5–8 vessels per group). Original magnification, ×400.