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  • Title: The lamina adventitia is the major site of immune cell accumulation in standard chow-fed apolipoprotein E-deficient mice.
    Author: Moos MP, John N, Gräbner R, Nossmann S, Günther B, Vollandt R, Funk CD, Kaiser B, Habenicht AJ.
    Journal: Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol; 2005 Nov; 25(11):2386-91. PubMed ID: 16179593.
    Abstract:
    OBJECTIVE: Cells of adaptive immunity have been implicated in atherogenesis. Though substantial information is available on immune cells in atherosclerotic lesions of the lamina intima, cells in the lamina adventitia have received less attention. METHODS AND RESULTS: The composition of immune cells in the innominate artery and abdominal aorta was examined in young, adult, and old apolipoprotein (apo) E(-/-) and wild-type mice on standard mouse chow. In the innominate artery of apoE(-/-) mice, adventitial T cells increased at 32, 52, and 78 weeks exceeding those of the intima by 6-, 24-, and 85-fold. Single T cells dominated in young mice, later T/B cell clusters emerged, and lymphoid-like structures reminiscent of inflammatory follicles formed preferentially in the abdominal aorta of old mice. Follicles contained organized sets of immune response-regulating cells: Interdigitating dendritic cells, T cell effectors, proliferating B cells, and plasma cells. Adventitial T cell inflammation was associated with a marked increase in transcripts of the chemokine MIP-1alpha in the aorta but not in spleen or liver. CONCLUSIONS: Adventitial lymphocyte infiltration and formation of inflammatory follicle-like structures in the abdominal aorta of old apoE(-/-) mice point to the adventitia as a site of local adaptive immune reactions during atherogenesis in hyperlipidemic mice.
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