Affiliation: | Department of Pathology and The Specialized Center of Research in Atherosclerosis, The University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60657, U.S.A. |
Abstract: | The concept that much of the cholesterol deposition in atherosclerotic plaque development is provided by ingress of blood-derived apo B-rich lipoproteins into the arterial intima is given support by the study of arterial apo B accumulation. To compare the arterial wall level of immunoreactive apo B during the progression of diet-induced atherosclerosis in two widely used animal models of atherosclerosis, rhesus and cynomolgus monkeys were fed an atherogenic diet for 4, 8, and 12 months and their abdominal aortas quantitated for apo B. Apo B was extracted from aortic intima-media homogenates in two forms: Tris-buffer extractable or ‘loosely bound’ and detergent (Triton X-100) extractable or ‘tightly bound’. The aortic extracts were quantitated for apo B by radial immunodiffusion, using goat antirhesus apo B along with serum LDL standards of the appropriate species diluted in the two extract solutions.The control monkeys' aortas contained only buffer-extractable apo B. The atherosclerotic aortas of both species of monkeys progressively increased their levels of loosely bound and tightly bound apo B through 4, 8, and 12 months of atherogenic diet feeding, with the 8- and 12-month cynomolgus aortas containing much larger amounts of apo B than the rhesus aortas. These differences in aortic apo B content could be accounted for by the greater rate at which the cynomolgus atherosclerotic lesions developed at the later time points. When the total lesion apo B levels were correlated with representative morphometrically-quantitated histopathologic sections of the homogenized aortas, a highly significant correlation was seen between the total aortic apo B values and both the absolute area of the intimal lesions and the total area of oil red O stainable lipid in the lesions (P < 0.001). These data indicate that as atherosclerotic lesions become larger and richer in lipid with progression of the disease, the amount of apo B-associated lipoproteins which are deposited unmetabolized in the lesions increases. These lipoproteins are increased in both the tightly bound and loosely bound forms. |