Patricia G. Wilson
University of Kentucky
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Featured researches published by Patricia G. Wilson.
Journal of Lipid Research | 2008
Fei Huang; Joel C. Thompson; Patricia G. Wilson; Hnin Hnin Aung; John C. Rutledge; Lisa R. Tannock
Angiotensin II (angII) is known to promote atherosclerosis; however, the mechanisms involved are not fully understood. To determine whether angII stimulates proteoglycan production and LDL retention, LDL receptor-deficient mice were infused with angII (1,000 ng/kg/min) or saline via osmotic minipumps. To control for the hypertensive effect of angII, a parallel group received norepinephrine (NE; 5.6 mg/kg/day). Arterial lipid accumulation was evaluated by measuring the retention rate of LDL in isolated carotid arteries perfused ex vivo. Mice infused with angII had increased vascular content of biglycan and perlecan and retained twice as much LDL as saline- or NE-infused mice, although no group developed atherosclerosis at this time. To determine whether this increase in biglycan and perlecan content predisposed to atherosclerosis development, mice were infused with angII, saline, or NE for 4 weeks, then pumps were removed and mice received an atherogenic Western diet for another 6 weeks. Mice that had received angII infusions had 3-fold increased atherosclerosis compared with mice that had received saline or NE, and apolipoprotein B colocalized with both proteoglycans. Thus, one mechanism by which angII promotes atherosclerosis is increased proteoglycan synthesis and increased arterial LDL retention, which precedes and contributes to atherosclerosis development.
American Journal of Pathology | 2008
Patricia G. Wilson; Joel C. Thompson; Nancy R. Webb; Frederick C. de Beer; Victoria L. King; Lisa R. Tannock
Inflammatory markers serum amyloid A (SAA) and C-reactive protein (CRP) are predictive of cardiac disease and are proposed to play causal roles in the development of atherosclerosis, in which the retention of lipoproteins by vascular wall proteoglycans is critical. The purpose of this study was to determine whether SAA and/or CRP alters vascular proteoglycan synthesis and lipoprotein retention in a pro-atherogenic manner. Vascular smooth muscle cells were stimulated with either SAA or CRP (1 to 100 mg/L) and proteoglycans were then isolated and characterized. SAA, but not CRP, increased proteoglycan sulfate incorporation by 50 to 100% in a dose-dependent manner (P < 0.0001), increased glycosaminoglycan chain length, and increased low-density lipoprotein (LDL) binding affinity (K(d), 29 microg/ml LDL versus 90 microg/ml LDL for SAA versus control proteoglycans; P < 0.005). Furthermore, SAA up-regulated biglycan via the induction of endogenous transforming growth factor (TGF)-beta. To determine whether SAA stimulated proteoglycan synthesis in vivo, ApoE(-/-) mice were injected with an adenovirus expressing human SAA-1, a null virus, or saline. Mice that received adenovirus expressing SAA had increased TGF-beta concentrations in plasma and increased aortic biglycan content compared with mice that received either null virus or saline. Thus, SAA alters vascular proteoglycans in a pro-atherogenic manner via the stimulation of TGF-beta and may play a causal role in the development of atherosclerosis.
American Journal of Pathology | 2011
Joel C. Thompson; Patricia G. Wilson; Katie Brandewie; Deepa Taneja; Liliana Schaefer; Bonnie Mitchell; Lisa R. Tannock
Hyperlipidemia worsens diabetic nephropathy, although the mechanism by which renal lipids accumulate is unknown. We previously demonstrated that renal proteoglycans have high low-density lipoprotein (LDL) binding affinity, suggesting that proteoglycan-mediated LDL retention may contribute to renal lipid accumulation. The aim of this study was to determine the relative effect of diabetes and hyperlipidemia on renal proteoglycan content. Diabetic and non-diabetic LDL receptor-deficient mice were fed diets containing 0% or 0.12% cholesterol for 26 weeks, and then kidneys were analyzed for renal lipid and proteoglycan content. Diabetic mice on the high-cholesterol diet had accelerated development of diabetic nephropathy with elevations in urine albumin excretion, glomerular and renal hypertrophy, and mesangial matrix expansion. Renal lipid accumulation was significantly increased by consumption of the 0.12% cholesterol diet, diabetes, and especially by both. The renal proteoglycans biglycan and decorin were detectable in glomeruli, with a significant increase in renal biglycan content in diabetic mice on the high-cholesterol diet. Renal biglycan and renal apolipoprotein B were colocalized, and regression analyses showed a significant relation between renal biglycan and renal apolipoprotein B content. The increased renal biglycan content in diabetic nephropathy probably contributes to renal lipid accumulation and the development of diabetic nephropathy.
Journal of Lipid Research | 2015
Joel C. Thompson; Colton Jayne; Jennifer Thompson; Patricia G. Wilson; Meghan H. Yoder; Nancy R. Webb; Lisa R. Tannock
Serum amyloid A (SAA) has a number of proatherogenic effects including induction of vascular proteoglycans. Chronically elevated SAA was recently shown to increase atherosclerosis in mice. The purpose of this study was to determine whether a brief increase in SAA similarly increased atherosclerosis in a murine model. The recombination activating gene 1-deficient (rag1−/−) × apolipoprotein E-deficient (apoe−/−) and apoe−/− male mice were injected, multiple times or just once respectively, with an adenoviral vector encoding human SAA1 (ad-SAA); the injected mice and controls were maintained on chow for 12–16 weeks. Mice receiving multiple injections of ad-SAA, in which SAA elevation was sustained, had increased atherosclerosis compared with controls. Strikingly, mice receiving only a single injection of ad-SAA, in which SAA was only briefly elevated, also had increased atherosclerosis compared with controls. Using in vitro studies, we demonstrate that SAA treatment leads to increased LDL retention, and that prevention of transforming growth factor beta (TGF-β) signaling prevents SAA-induced increases in LDL retention and SAA-induced increases in vascular biglycan content. We propose that SAA increases atherosclerosis development via induction of TGF-β, increased vascular biglycan content, and increased LDL retention. These data suggest that even short-term inflammation with concomitant increase in SAA may increase the risk of developing CVD.
Atherosclerosis | 2014
Joel C. Thompson; Tao Tang; Patricia G. Wilson; Meghan H. Yoder; Lisa R. Tannock
OBJECTIVE The response to retention hypothesis of atherogenesis proposes that atherosclerosis is initiated via the retention of atherogenic lipoproteins by vascular proteoglycans. Co-localization studies suggest that of all the vascular proteoglycans, biglycan is the one most closely co-localized with LDL. The goal of this study was to determine if over-expression of biglycan in hyperlipidemic mice would increase atherosclerosis development. METHODS Transgenic mice were developed by expressing biglycan under control of the smooth muscle actin promoter, and were crossed to the LDL receptor deficient (C57BL/6 background) atherosclerotic mouse model. Biglycan transgenic and non-transgenic control mice were fed an atherogenic Western diet for 4-12 weeks. RESULTS LDL receptor deficient mice overexpressing biglycan under control of the smooth muscle alpha actin promoter had increased atherosclerosis development that correlated with vascular biglycan content. CONCLUSION Increased vascular biglycan content predisposes to increased lipid retention and increased atherosclerosis development.
Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2014
Tao Tang; Joel C. Thompson; Patricia G. Wilson; Meghan H. Yoder; Julia Müeller; Jens W. Fischer; Kevin Jon Williams; Lisa R. Tannock
Proteoglycans of the arterial wall play a critical role in vascular integrity and the development of atherosclerosis owing to their ability to organize extracellular matrix molecules and to bind and retain atherogenic apolipoprotein (apo)-B containing lipoproteins. Prior studies have suggested a role for biglycan in aneurysms and in atherosclerosis. Angiotensin II (angII) infusions into mice have been shown to induce abdominal aortic aneurysm development, increase vascular biglycan content, increase arterial retention of lipoproteins, and accelerate atherosclerosis. The goal of this study was to determine the role of biglycan in angII-induced vascular diseases. Biglycan-deficient or biglycan wildtype mice crossed to LDL receptor deficient (Ldlr-/-) mice (C57BL/6 background) were infused with angII (500 or 1000ng/kg/min) or saline for 28days while fed on normal chow, then pumps were removed, and mice were switched to an atherogenic Western diet for 6weeks. During angII infusions, biglycan-deficient mice developed abdominal aortic aneurysms, unusual descending thoracic aneurysms, and a striking mortality caused by aortic rupture (76% for males and 48% for females at angII 1000ng/kg/min). Histological analyses of non-aneurysmal aortic segments from biglycan-deficient mice revealed a deficiency of dense collagen fibers and the aneurysms demonstrated conspicuous elastin breaks. AngII infusion increased subsequent atherosclerotic lesion development in both biglycan-deficient and biglycan wildtype mice. However, the biglycan genotype did not affect the atherosclerotic lesion area induced by the Western diet after treatment with angII. Biglycan-deficient mice exhibited significantly increased vascular perlecan content compared to biglycan wildtype mice. Analyses of the atherosclerotic lesions demonstrated that vascular perlecan co-localized with apoB, suggesting that increased perlecan compensated for biglycan deficiency in terms of lipoprotein retention. Biglycan deficiency increases aortic aneurysm development and is not protective against the development of atherosclerosis. Biglycan deficiency leads to loosely packed aortic collagen fibers, increased susceptibility of aortic elastin fibers to angII-induced stress, and up-regulation of vascular perlecan content.
Journal of Lipid Research | 2010
Deepa Taneja; Joel C. Thompson; Patricia G. Wilson; Katie Brandewie; Liliana Schaefer; Bonnie Mitchell; Lisa R. Tannock
Hyperlipidemia is a risk factor for development and progression of diabetic nephropathy. However, it is not known if reduction of hyperlipidemia is protective against progression of disease. The goal of this study was to determine if reduction of hypercholesterolemia could limit progression of diabetic nephropathy. Diabetic and nondiabetic LDL receptor deficient (LDLR−/−) mice were fed diets containing either no cholesterol (0%) or high cholesterol (0.12%) for 36 weeks. One group each of diabetic and nondiabetic mice were fed the high-cholesterol diet for 26 weeks then changed to the 0% cholesterol diet for the last 10 weeks. Consumption of the high-cholesterol diet exacerbated the development of diabetic nephropathy with elevations in urine albumin excretion, glomerular and renal hypertrophy, and mesangial matrix expansion. Increased glomerular lipid and apolipoprotein B accumulation was found in diabetic mice that consumed the 0.12% cholesterol diet compared with other groups. However, diabetic mice that changed from the high-cholesterol diet to the 0% cholesterol diet for the last 10 weeks had lower urine albumin excretion and mesangial matrix expansion compared with mice that consumed the 0.12% cholesterol diet throughout. This suggests that hyperlipidemia causes continuous renal injury, and that lowering cholesterol levels by dietary means can improve renal function in diabetic LDLR−/− mice.
Journal of Lipid Research | 2013
Tao Tang; Patricia G. Wilson; Joel C. Thompson; Christina Nelson; Meghan H. Yoder; Lisa R. Tannock
Angiotensin II (angII) accelerates atherosclerosis, but the mechanisms are not fully understood. The aim of this study was to determine whether TGFβ is required for angII-induced atherosclerosis. Ldlr-null mice fed a normal chow diet were infused with angII or saline for 28 days. A single injection of TGFβ neutralizing antibody 1D11 (2 mg/kg) prevented angII-induction of TGFβ1 levels, and strikingly attenuated angII-induced accumulation of aortic biglycan content. To study atherosclerosis, mice were infused with angII or saline for 4 weeks, and then fed Western diet for a further 6 weeks. 1D11 had no effect on systolic blood pressure or plasma cholesterol; however, angII-infused mice that received 1D11 had reduced atherosclerotic lesion area by 30% (P < 0.05). Immunohistochemical analyses demonstrated that angII induced both lipid retention and accumulation of biglycan and perlecan which colocalized with apoB. 1D11 strikingly reduced the effect of angII on biglycan but not perlecan. 1D11 decreased total collagen content (P < 0.05) in the lesion area without changing plaque inflammation markers (CD68 and CD45). Thus, this study demonstrates that neutralization of TGFβ attenuated angII stimulation of biglycan accumulation and atherogenesis in mice, suggesting that TGFβ-mediated biglycan induction is one of the mechanisms underlying angII-promoted atherosclerosis.
Journal of Investigative Medicine | 2007
Patricia G. Wilson; Katherine Drennon; Lisa R. Tannock
Background Diabetes is associated with accelerated atherosclerosis, but the mechanisms responsible for this are not known. Proteoglycans have been shown to play a critical role in the initiation of atherosclerosis owing to their ability to bind and retain atherogenic lipoproteins in the artery wall. Proteoglycan structure and composition are altered in atherosclerotic lesions compared with adjacent normal regions of the artery wall, and this is exaggerated in diabetes. The purpose of this study was to determine if metabolic factors associated with diabetes lead to altered proteoglycan structure and composition. Methods Vascular smooth muscle cells, endothelial cells, and macrophages were exposed to normal (5.6 mmol/L) or high (25 mmol/L) glucose levels, various insulin and free fatty acid levels, and the cytokines transforming growth factor β (TGF-β1) and platelet-derived growth factor, alone or in combination, and proteoglycan synthesis was determined. Results Glucose concentrations, insulin, and free fatty acids did not alter proteoglycan synthesis, size, or relative distribution. The effect of TGF-β to increase biglycan and versican synthesis, increase sulfate incorporation, and increase the size of the secreted proteoglycans was not altered by the ambient glucose level in the culture medium, nor did high glucose increase levels of active TGF-β. Conclusion Vascular proteoglycan synthesis is not affected by metabolic factors associated with diabetes. We suggest that elevated TGF-β levels in diabetes are responsible for the altered proteoglycan synthesis observed in diabetes.
Connective Tissue Research | 2013
Tao Tang; Joel C. Thompson; Patricia G. Wilson; Christina Nelson; Kevin Jon Williams; Lisa R. Tannock
Biglycan (BGN), a small leucine-rich proteoglycan, binds the pro-fibrotic cytokine transforming growth factor β (TGFβ) and inhibits its bioactivity in vitro. Nevertheless, it is controversial whether BGN plays an inhibitory role in vivo. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of BGN deficiency on TGFβ activity in vivo by studying 1-year-old Bgn null and wild-type (WT) mice on an Ldlr-null background. Phenotypic and metabolic characterization showed that the Bgn null mice had lower body weight, shorter body length, and shorter femur length (all p < 0.05). Surprisingly, the Bgn null mice also exhibited a striking reduction in percent body fat compared to WT mice (p == 0.006), but no changes were observed in plasma triglycerides, total cholesterol, or glycohemoglobin. Both total and bioactive TGFβ1 concentrations in plasma were markedly elevated in Bgn null mice compared to WT mice (4-fold and 11-fold increase, respectively, both p < 0.001), but no changes were found in hepatic levels of mRNA for Tgfβ1 or its receptors. Bgn null mice exhibited elevated expression of hepatic fibronectin protein (p = 0.034) without changes in hepatic or renal histology, and Bgn null mice had decreased urinary albumin/creatinine ratio (p = 0.01). Two key downstream targets of bone morphogenetic protein 4-like signaling, SMAD1/3/5 phosphorylation and Id2 gene expression, were found dramatically reduced in Bgn null livers (p = 0.034). Thus, BGN deficiency decreases body fat in this hyperlipidemic mouse model without changing liver or kidney histology. Overall, we propose that this unexpected phenotype arises from the effects of BGN deficiency in vivo to elevate TGFβ levels while decreasing bone morphogenetic protein 4-like signaling.