Radiation Impacts Early Atherosclerosis by Suppressing Intimal LDL Accumulation

Abstract
Rationale: Bone marrow transplantation (BMT) is used frequently to study the role of hematopoietic cells in atherosclerosis, but aortic arch lesions are smaller in mice after BMT. Objective: To identify the earliest stage of atherosclerosis inhibited by BMT and elucidate potential mechanisms. Methods and Results:Ldlr-/- mice underwent total body γ-irradiation, bone marrow reconstitution and 6-week recovery. Atherosclerosis was studied in the ascending aortic arch and compared to mice without BMT. In BMT mice neutral lipid and myeloid cell topography were lower in lesions after feeding a cholesterol-rich diet (CRD) for 3, 6 and 12 weeks. Lesion coalescence and height were suppressed dramatically in mice post-BMT, whereas lateral growth was inhibited minimally. Targeted radiation to the upper thorax alone reproduced the BMT phenotype. Classical monocyte recruitment, intimal myeloid cell proliferation and apoptosis did not account for the post-BMT phenotype. Neutral lipid accumulation was reduced in 5-day lesions, thus we developed quantitative assays for LDL accumulation and paracellular leakage using DiI-labeled human LDL and rhodamine B-labeled 70kD dextran. LDL accumulation was dramatically higher in the intima of Ldlr-/- relative to Ldlr+/+ mice, and was inhibited by injection of HDL mimics, suggesting a regulated process. LDL, but not dextran, accumulation was lower in mice post-BMT both at baseline and in 5-day lesions. Since the transcript abundance of molecules implicated in LDL transcytosis was not significantly different in the post-BMT intima, transcriptomics from whole aortic arch intima, and at single cell resolution, was performed to give insights into pathways modulated by BMT. Conclusions: Radiation exposure inhibits LDL entry into the aortic intima at baseline and the earliest stages of atherosclerosis. Single cell transcriptomic analysis suggests that LDL uptake by endothelial cells is diverted to lysosomal degradation and reverse cholesterol transport pathways. This reduces intimal accumulation of lipid and impacts lesion initiation and growth.
Funding Information
  • Gouvernement du Canada | Canadian Institutes of Health Research (FDN-154299)
  • Gouvernement du Canada | Canadian Institutes of Health Research (FDN-154326)
  • Gouvernement du Canada | CIHR | Institute of Infection and Immunity (PJT-162098)
  • Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada (G-16-00013521)
  • Gouvernement du Canada | CIHR | Institute of Circulatory and Respiratory Health (PJT- 364831)