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First published online April 29, 2008
Experimental Biology and Medicine doi: 10.3181/0711-RM-320
© 2008 by the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine

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Regular Manuscript

Over-expression of transferrin receptor and ferritin related to clinical symptoms and destabilization of human carotid plaques

Wei Li 1, Li-Hua Xu 1, Claes Forssel 1, Jerome L Sullivan 2, and Xi-Ming Yuan 3*

1 Linkoping University
2 University of Florida College of Medicine
3 Linkoping University, Sweden

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: yuan.ximing{at}inr.liu.se.


   Abstract

Accumulation of tissue iron has been implicated in development of atherosclerotic lesions mainly because of increased iron-catalyzed oxidative injury. However, it remains unknown whether cellular iron import and storage in human atheroma are related to human atheroma development. We found that transferrin receptor 1 (TfR1), a major iron importer, is highly expressed in foamy macrophages and some smooth muscle cells in intimal lesions of human carotid atheroma, mainly in cytoplasmic accumulation pattern. In 52 human carotid atherosclerotic lesions, TfR1 expression was positively correlated with macrophage infiltration, ectopic lysosomal cathepsin L and ferritin expression. Highly expressed TfR1 and ferritin in CD68 positive macrophages were significantly associated with development and severity of human carotid plaques, smoking and patient's symptoms. The findings suggest that pathologic macrophage iron metabolism may contribute to vulnerability of human atheroma, established risk factors and their clinical symptoms. The cytoplasmic over-expression of TfR1 may be the result of lysosomal dysfunction and ectopic accumulation of lysosomal cathepsin L caused by atheroma-relevant lipids in atherogenesis.

Key Words: Atherosclerosis, Apoptosis, Iron metabolism, Lysosomes, Macrophages







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