Recruitment of Chlamydia pneumoniae–Infected Macrophages to the Carotid Artery Wall in Noninfected, Nonatherosclerotic Mice

AE May, V Redecke, S Grüner, R Schmidt… - … , and vascular biology, 2003 - Am Heart Assoc
AE May, V Redecke, S Grüner, R Schmidt, S Massberg, T Miethke, B Ryba…
Arteriosclerosis, thrombosis, and vascular biology, 2003Am Heart Assoc
Objective—Monocyte recruitment into the subendothelium is a crucial step in atherogenesis.
Chlamydia pneumoniae resides in circulating monocytes and in the atherosclerotic vascular
wall. However, the role of C pneumoniae for monocyte recruitment is unknown. The aim of
this study was to examine the impact of C pneumoniae on monocyte adhesion and
migration. Methods and Results—C pneumoniae–infected, fluorescence-labeled mouse
macrophages (ANA-1) were injected intravenously into noninfected, healthy mice. In vivo …
Objective— Monocyte recruitment into the subendothelium is a crucial step in atherogenesis. Chlamydia pneumoniae resides in circulating monocytes and in the atherosclerotic vascular wall. However, the role of C pneumoniae for monocyte recruitment is unknown. The aim of this study was to examine the impact of C pneumoniae on monocyte adhesion and migration.
Methods and Results— C pneumoniae–infected, fluorescence-labeled mouse macrophages (ANA-1) were injected intravenously into noninfected, healthy mice. In vivo videomicroscopy showed increased rolling and firm adhesion to the carotid artery compared with noninfected macrophages. In vitro, C pneumoniae infection (yielding 25% to 35% infected monocytes) increased adhesion of human monocytes or MonoMac6 cells to human umbilical vein endothelial cells and improved cell migration through endothelial-like ECV604 cells. Cell adhesion was inhibited by antibody blockade of very late antigen-4, lymphocyte function-associated antigen-1, macrophage antigen-1, or urokinase receptor, which were found upregulated or activated on C pneumoniae infection (flow cytometry). In contrast, C trachomatis did not induce monocyte adhesion at comparable infection rates (25% to 35%), indicating a unique activation pathway for C pneumoniae. Polymyxin B did not affect C pneumoniae–induced adhesion, excluding a relevant role of lipopolysaccharide in this process.
Conclusions— These data indicate that C pneumoniae can direct monocytes to predilection sites of nonatherosclerotic vessel walls in vivo by activation of the integrin adhesion receptor system.
Am Heart Assoc