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Macrophage deficiency of p38α MAPK promotes apoptosis and plaque necrosis in advanced atherosclerotic lesions in mice
Tracie A. Seimon, … , Alan R. Tall, Ira A. Tabas
Tracie A. Seimon, … , Alan R. Tall, Ira A. Tabas
Published March 16, 2009
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2009;119(4):886-898. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI37262.
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Research Article Cardiology

Macrophage deficiency of p38α MAPK promotes apoptosis and plaque necrosis in advanced atherosclerotic lesions in mice

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Abstract

ER stress occurs in macrophage-rich areas of advanced atherosclerotic lesions and contributes to macrophage apoptosis and subsequent plaque necrosis. Therefore, signaling pathways that alter ER stress–induced apoptosis may affect advanced atherosclerosis. Here we placed Apoe–/– mice deficient in macrophage p38α MAPK on a Western diet and found that they had a marked increase in macrophage apoptosis and plaque necrosis. The macrophage p38α–deficient lesions also exhibited a significant reduction in collagen content and a marked thinning of the fibrous cap, which suggests that plaque progression was advanced in these mice. Consistent with our in vivo data, we found that ER stress–induced apoptosis in cultured primary mouse macrophages was markedly accelerated under conditions of p38 inhibition. Pharmacological inhibition or genetic ablation of p38 suppressed activation of Akt in cultured macrophages and in atherosclerotic lesions. In addition, inhibition of Akt enhanced ER stress–induced macrophage apoptosis, and expression of a constitutively active myristoylated Akt blocked the enhancement of ER stress–induced apoptosis that occurred with p38 inhibition in cultured cells. Our results demonstrate that p38α MAPK may play a critical role in suppressing ER stress–induced macrophage apoptosis in vitro and advanced lesional macrophage apoptosis in vivo.

Authors

Tracie A. Seimon, Yibin Wang, Seongah Han, Takafumi Senokuchi, Dorien M. Schrijvers, George Kuriakose, Alan R. Tall, Ira A. Tabas

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Figure 9

Role of p38 MAPK in protecting macrophages from apoptosis in atherosclerotic lesions.

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Role of p38 MAPK in protecting macrophages from apoptosis in atheroscler...
Macrophage death can be triggered by various proapoptotic events, including ER stress factors, cytokines, and Fas, that work alone or, most likely, in combination to trigger macrophage death. In vivo evidence has supported an important role for STAT1 and the ER stress pathways in promoting macrophage apoptosis and advanced plaque necrosis (15, 16, 19). Furthermore, Fas, JNK, STAT1, and CHOP are all necessary for ER stress–mediated apoptosis in vitro (2, 15, 18, 27, 63). Activation of the p38-MK2-Akt pathway appears to play an essential role in balancing the survival-death pathway by protecting from macrophage apoptosis and necrotic core formation. When the p38-Akt survival pathway is lost, macrophage apoptosis is increased. See Discussion for details.

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