Role of Adiponectin in Preventing Vascular Stenosis

Morihiro Matsuda(Osaka University), Iichiro Shimomura(Osaka University), Masataka Sata(The University of Tokyo), Yukio Arita(Osaka University), Makoto Nishida(Osaka University), Norikazu Maeda(Osaka University), Masahiro Kumada(Osaka University), Yoshihisa Okamoto(Osaka University), Hiroyuki Nagaretani(Osaka University), Hitoshi Nishizawa(Osaka University), Ken Kishida(Osaka University), Ryutaro Komuro(Osaka University), Noriyuki Ouchi(Osaka University), Shinji Kihara(Osaka University), Ryozo Nagai(The University of Tokyo), Tohru Funahashi(Osaka University), Yūji Matsuzawa(Osaka University)
Journal of Biological Chemistry
September 27, 2002
Cited by 813Open Access
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Abstract

Obesity is more linked to vascular disease, including atherosclerosis and restenotic change, after balloon angioplasty. The precise mechanism linking obesity and vascular disease is still unclear. Previously we have demonstrated that the plasma levels of adiponectin, an adipose-derived hormone, decreases in obese subjects, and that hypoadiponectinemia is associated to ischemic heart disease. In current the study, we investigated the in vivorole of adiponectin on the neointimal thickening after artery injury using adiponectin-deficient mice and adiponectin-producing adenovirus. Adiponectin-deficient mice showed severe neointimal thickening and increased proliferation of vascular smooth muscle cells in mechanically injured arteries. Adenovirus-mediated supplement of adiponectin attenuated neointimal proliferation. In cultured smooth muscle cells, adiponectin attenuated DNA synthesis induced by growth factors including platelet-derived growth factor, heparin-binding epidermal growth factor (EGF)-like growth factor (HB-EGF), basic fibroblast growth factor, and EGF and cell proliferation and migration induced by HB-EGF. In cultured endothelial cells, adiponectin attenuated HB-EGF expression stimulated by tumor necrosis factor α. The current study suggests an adipo-vascular axis, a direct link between fat and artery. A therapeutic strategy to increase plasma adiponectin should be useful in preventing vascular restenosis after angioplasty.


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