AI Article Synopsis

  • Vein graft disease refers to the inflammation and atherosclerosis that affects saphenous vein grafts used in coronary artery bypass surgery over time.
  • The study employed a novel spatial transcriptomic analysis to explore how arterial blood flow affects gene expression in the long saphenous vein, identifying 413 significant genes that respond to haemodynamic changes.
  • Findings revealed key pathways related to inflammation and tissue remodeling that could serve as potential therapeutic targets to prevent vein graft disease in the future.

Article Abstract

Vein graft disease is the process by which saphenous vein grafts, utilised for revascularisation during coronary artery bypass graft surgery, undergo an inflammation-driven intimal hyperplasia and accelerated atherosclerosis process in subsequent years after implantation. The role of the arterial circulation, particularly the haemodynamic properties' impact on graft patency, have been investigated but have not to date been explored in depth at the transcriptomic level. We have undertaken the first-in-man spatial transcriptomic analysis of the long saphenous vein in response to ex vivo acute arterial haemodynamic stimulation, utilising a combination of a custom 3D-printed perfusion bioreactor and the 10X Genomics Visium Spatial Gene Expression technology. We identify a total of 413 significant genes (372 upregulated and 41 downregulated) differentially expressed in response to arterial haemodynamic conditions. These genes were associated with pathways including , , , and , among others. These are established pathways involved in the initiation of an early pro-inflammatory response, leukocyte activation and adhesion signalling, tissue remodelling, and cellular differentiation. Utilising unsupervised clustering analysis, we have been able to classify subsets of the expression based on cell type and with spatial resolution. These findings allow for further characterisation of the early saphenous vein graft transcriptional landscape during the earliest stage of implantation that contributes to vein graft disease, in particular validation of pathways and druggable targets that could contribute towards the therapeutic inhibition of processes underpinning vein graft disease.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11476946PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms251910368DOI Listing

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