Thomas Mawson
Brigham and Women's Hospital
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Publication
Featured researches published by Thomas Mawson.
Circulation Research | 2017
Grégory Franck; Thomas Mawson; Grasiele Sausen; Manuel Salinas; Gustavo Santos Masson; Andrew J. Cole; Marina Beltrami-Moreira; Yiannis S. Chatzizisis; Thibault Quillard; Yevgenia Tesmenitsky; Eugenia Shvartz; Galina K. Sukhova; Filip K. Swirski; Matthias Nahrendorf; Elena Aikawa; Kevin Croce; Peter Libby
Rationale: Superficial erosion currently causes up to a third of acute coronary syndromes; yet, we lack understanding of its mechanisms. Thrombi because of superficial intimal erosion characteristically complicate matrix-rich atheromata in regions of flow perturbation. Objective: This study tested in vivo the involvement of disturbed flow and of neutrophils, hyaluronan, and Toll-like receptor 2 ligation in superficial intimal injury, a process implicated in superficial erosion. Methods and Results: In mouse carotid arteries with established intimal lesions tailored to resemble the substrate of human eroded plaques, acute flow perturbation promoted downstream endothelial cell activation, neutrophil accumulation, endothelial cell death and desquamation, and mural thrombosis. Neutrophil loss-of-function limited these findings. Toll-like receptor 2 agonism activated luminal endothelial cells, and deficiency of this innate immune receptor decreased intimal neutrophil adherence in regions of local flow disturbance, reducing endothelial cell injury and local thrombosis (P<0.05). Conclusions: These results implicate flow disturbance, neutrophils, and Toll-like receptor 2 signaling as mechanisms that contribute to superficial erosion, a cause of acute coronary syndrome of likely growing importance in the statin era.
Circulation Research | 2017
Grégory Franck; Thomas Mawson; Grasiele Sausen; Manuel Salinas; Gustavo Santos Masson; Andrew J. Cole; Marina Beltrami-Moreira; Yiannis S. Chatzizisis; Thibault Quillard; Yevgenia Tesmenitsky; Eugenia Shvartz; Galina K. Sukhova; Filip K. Swirski; Matthias Nahrendorf; Elena Aikawa; Kevin Croce; Peter Libby
Rationale: Superficial erosion currently causes up to a third of acute coronary syndromes; yet, we lack understanding of its mechanisms. Thrombi because of superficial intimal erosion characteristically complicate matrix-rich atheromata in regions of flow perturbation. Objective: This study tested in vivo the involvement of disturbed flow and of neutrophils, hyaluronan, and Toll-like receptor 2 ligation in superficial intimal injury, a process implicated in superficial erosion. Methods and Results: In mouse carotid arteries with established intimal lesions tailored to resemble the substrate of human eroded plaques, acute flow perturbation promoted downstream endothelial cell activation, neutrophil accumulation, endothelial cell death and desquamation, and mural thrombosis. Neutrophil loss-of-function limited these findings. Toll-like receptor 2 agonism activated luminal endothelial cells, and deficiency of this innate immune receptor decreased intimal neutrophil adherence in regions of local flow disturbance, reducing endothelial cell injury and local thrombosis (P<0.05). Conclusions: These results implicate flow disturbance, neutrophils, and Toll-like receptor 2 signaling as mechanisms that contribute to superficial erosion, a cause of acute coronary syndrome of likely growing importance in the statin era.
Circulation Research | 2018
Grégory Franck; Thomas Mawson; Eduardo J. Folco; Roberto Molinaro; Victoria Ruvkun; Daniel Engelbertsen; Xin Liu; Yevgenia Tesmenitsky; Eugenia Shvartz; Galina K. Sukhova; Jean-Baptiste Michel; Antonino Nicoletti; Andrew H. Lichtman; Denisa D. Wagner; Kevin Croce; Peter Libby
Rationale: Neutrophils likely contribute to the thrombotic complications of human atheromata. In particular, neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) could exacerbate local inflammation and amplify and propagate arterial intimal injury and thrombosis. PAD4 (peptidyl arginine deiminase 4) participates in NET formation, but an understanding of this enzyme’s role in atherothrombosis remains scant. Objective: This study tested the hypothesis that PAD4 and NETs influence experimental atherogenesis and in processes implicated in superficial erosion, a form of plaque complication we previously associated with NETs. Methods and Results: Bone marrow chimeric Ldlr deficient mice reconstituted with either wild-type or PAD4-deficient cells underwent studies that assessed atheroma formation or procedures designed to probe mechanisms related to superficial erosion. PAD4 deficiency neither retarded fatty streak formation nor reduced plaque size or inflammation in bone marrow chimeric mice that consumed an atherogenic diet. In contrast, either a PAD4 deficiency in bone marrow-derived cells or administration of DNaseI to disrupt NETs decreased the extent of arterial intimal injury in mice with arterial lesions tailored to recapitulate characteristics of human atheroma complicated by erosion. Conclusions: These results indicate that PAD4 from bone marrow-derived cells and NETs do not influence chronic experimental atherogenesis, but participate causally in acute thrombotic complications of intimal lesions that recapitulate features of superficial erosion.
Circulation Research | 2017
Grégory Franck; Thomas Mawson; Grasiele Sausen; Manuel Salinas; Gustavo Santos Masson; Andrew J. Cole; Marina Beltrami-Moreira; Yiannis S. Chatzizisis; Thibault Quillard; Yevgenia Tesmenitsky; Eugenia Shvartz; Galina K. Sukhova; Filip K. Swirski; Matthias Nahrendorf; Elena Aikawa; Kevin Croce; Peter Libby
Rationale: Superficial erosion currently causes up to a third of acute coronary syndromes; yet, we lack understanding of its mechanisms. Thrombi because of superficial intimal erosion characteristically complicate matrix-rich atheromata in regions of flow perturbation. Objective: This study tested in vivo the involvement of disturbed flow and of neutrophils, hyaluronan, and Toll-like receptor 2 ligation in superficial intimal injury, a process implicated in superficial erosion. Methods and Results: In mouse carotid arteries with established intimal lesions tailored to resemble the substrate of human eroded plaques, acute flow perturbation promoted downstream endothelial cell activation, neutrophil accumulation, endothelial cell death and desquamation, and mural thrombosis. Neutrophil loss-of-function limited these findings. Toll-like receptor 2 agonism activated luminal endothelial cells, and deficiency of this innate immune receptor decreased intimal neutrophil adherence in regions of local flow disturbance, reducing endothelial cell injury and local thrombosis (P<0.05). Conclusions: These results implicate flow disturbance, neutrophils, and Toll-like receptor 2 signaling as mechanisms that contribute to superficial erosion, a cause of acute coronary syndrome of likely growing importance in the statin era.
Circulation Research | 2017
Grégory Franck; Thomas Mawson; Grasiele Sausen; Manuel Salinas; Gustavo Santos Masson; Andrew J. Cole; Marina Beltrami-Moreira; Yiannis S. Chatzizisis; Thibault Quillard; Yevgenia Tesmenitsky; Eugenia Shvartz; Galina K. Sukhova; Filip K. Swirski; Matthias Nahrendorf; Elena Aikawa; Kevin Croce; Peter Libby
Rationale: Superficial erosion currently causes up to a third of acute coronary syndromes; yet, we lack understanding of its mechanisms. Thrombi because of superficial intimal erosion characteristically complicate matrix-rich atheromata in regions of flow perturbation. Objective: This study tested in vivo the involvement of disturbed flow and of neutrophils, hyaluronan, and Toll-like receptor 2 ligation in superficial intimal injury, a process implicated in superficial erosion. Methods and Results: In mouse carotid arteries with established intimal lesions tailored to resemble the substrate of human eroded plaques, acute flow perturbation promoted downstream endothelial cell activation, neutrophil accumulation, endothelial cell death and desquamation, and mural thrombosis. Neutrophil loss-of-function limited these findings. Toll-like receptor 2 agonism activated luminal endothelial cells, and deficiency of this innate immune receptor decreased intimal neutrophil adherence in regions of local flow disturbance, reducing endothelial cell injury and local thrombosis (P<0.05). Conclusions: These results implicate flow disturbance, neutrophils, and Toll-like receptor 2 signaling as mechanisms that contribute to superficial erosion, a cause of acute coronary syndrome of likely growing importance in the statin era.
Current Opinion in Lipidology | 2017
Thibaut Quillard; Grégory Franck; Thomas Mawson; Eduardo J. Folco; Peter Libby
Circulation Research | 2018
Grégory Franck; Thomas Mawson; Eduardo J. Folco; Roberto Molinaro; Victoria Ruvkun; Daniel Engelbertsen; Xin Liu; Yevgenia Tesmenitsky; Eugenia Shvartz; Galina K. Sukhova; Jean-Baptiste Michel; Antonino Nicoletti; Andrew H. Lichtman; Denisa D. Wagner; Kevin Croce; Peter Libby
Atherosclerosis | 2018
Grégory Franck; Thomas Mawson; Eduardo J. Folco; Roberto Molinaro; Victoria Ruvkun; Daniel Engelbertsen; Xin Liu; Yevgenia Tesmenitsky; Eugenia Shvartz; Galina K. Sukhova; Jean-Baptiste Michel; Antonino Nicoletti; Andrew H. Lichtman; Denisa D. Wagner; K.J. Libby
Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2018
Eduardo J. Folco; Thomas Mawson; Amélie Vromman; Breno Bernardes-Souza; Grégory Franck; Oscar Persson; Momotaro Nakamura; Gail Newton; Francis W. Luscinskas; Peter Libby
Circulation | 2017
Thomas Mawson; Eduardo J. Folco; Grégory Franck; Amélie Vromman; Breno Bernardes de Souza; Oscar Persson; Eugenia Shvartz; Peter Libby