AI Article Synopsis

  • Monocyte recruitment and migration are key factors in the development of atherosclerotic plaques, and understanding these processes is complicated by multiple diseases.
  • A new 3D hydrogel-based model is being developed to study the early stages of atherosclerosis, focusing on how monocytes behave in complex disease environments, using murine cells for the proof-of-concept.
  • The model shows that hyperglycemia increases monocyte adhesion without affecting migration, while chronic infection boosts both initial adhesion and migration, highlighting its ability to simulate disease conditions and support the study of inflammatory responses in atherosclerosis.

Article Abstract

Monocyte recruitment and transmigration are crucial in atherosclerotic plaque development. The multi-disease complexities aggravate the situation and continue to be a constant concern for understanding atherosclerosis plaque development. Herein, a 3D hydrogel-based model that integrates disease-induced microenvironments is sought to be designed, allowing us to explore the early stages of atherosclerosis, specifically examining monocyte fate in multi-disease complexities. As a proof-of-concept study, murine cells are employed to develop the model. The model is constructed with collagen embedded with murine aortic smooth muscle cells and a murine endothelial monolayer lining. The model achieves in vitro disease complexities using external stimuli such as glucose and lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Hyperglycemia exhibits a significant increase in monocyte adhesion but no enhancement in monocyte transmigration and foam cell conversion compared to euglycemia. Chronic infection achieved by LPS stimulation results in a remarkable augment in initial monocyte attachment and a significant increment in monocyte transmigration and foam cells in all concentrations. Moreover, the model exhibits synergistic sensitivity under multi-disease conditions such as hyperglycemia and infection, enhancing initial monocyte attachment, cell transmigration, and foam cell formation. Additionally, western blot data prove the enhanced levels of inflammatory biomarkers, indicating the model's capability to mimic disease-induced complexities during early atherosclerosis progression.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/adbi.202300463DOI Listing

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