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Role of CD100 in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis

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Author(s):
Maria Carolina Aquino Luque
Total Authors: 1
Document type: Doctoral Thesis
Press: São Paulo.
Institution: Universidade de São Paulo (USP). Faculdade de Medicina (FM/SBD)
Defense date:
Examining board members:
Jorge Elias Kalil Filho; Marcello Andre Barcinski; Magnus Ake Gidlund; Francisco Rafael Martins Laurindo; Heraldo Possolo de Souza
Advisor: Jorge Elias Kalil Filho
Abstract

Atherosclerosis is a chronic degenerative disease affecting vessels, with acute clinical consequences that include myocardium infarction or stroke, generally resulting from plaque rupture and thrombosis. It is now recognized as an inflammatory disease, initiated and developed in a hipercholesterolemic context. A work in our lab has used phage display techniques to compare atherosclerotic plaques and normal carotids, searching for altered proteins potentially involved in the pathogenesis of the disease. Many semaphorins and plexins (semaphorin receptors) have been identified, among which plexin B1, a high affinity receptor for CD100, suggesting an augmented level of CD100 in the atherosclerotic plaques. CD100 is the first semaphorin described in the immune system, and the only to possess two forms with distinct functionalities, being one associated to the membrane, mCD100, and another soluble form, sCD100. In the present work we have demonstrated CD100 expression in macrophages and foam cells of human atherosclerotic plaques, as well as its pattern of expression along monocyte-macrophage-foam cell differentiation and under distinct stimuli. Furthermore, we have identified for the first time the receptor involved in CD100 activities in these cells, namely plexin B2. Aditionally, we have detected CD100 expression in tissue as well as in in vitro cultured endothelial cells, also for the first time. According to these informations and adhesion blockage experiments we have shown that CD100 may act in the earliest phase of the establishment of atherosclerosis, as an adhesion molecule involved in monocyte-endothelial cell association. We have also verified that CD100 diminishes the intake of oxLDL in macrophages and foam cells. Only a few studies describe the presence or possible biological activity of CD100 in atherosclerosis or macrophages. Since the molecule has been shown to participate in the immune system, we believe that the differential expression of this semaphorin plays an amplifying role in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis. In the future, this protein could act as an inhibition target of the disease progression as well as its complications (AU)