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Title: | Identification of candidate genes linking systemic inflammation to atherosclerosis ; results of a human in vivo LPS infusion study |
Authors: | Sivapalaratnam, Suthesh Farrugia, Rosienne Nieuwdorp, Max Langford, Cordelia F. Beem, Rachel T. van Maiwald, Stephanie Zwaginga, Jaap Jan Gusnanto, Arief Watkins, Nicholas A. Trip, Mieke D. Ouwehand, Willem H. |
Keywords: | Atherosclerosis Monocytes Medical genetics Endotoxins |
Issue Date: | 2011 |
Publisher: | BioMed Central Ltd. |
Citation: | Sivapalaratnam, S., Farrugia, R., Nieuwdorp, M., Langford, C. F., van Beem, R. T., Maiwald, S., ... & Ouwehand, W. H. (2011). Identification of candidate genes linking systemic inflammation to atherosclerosis; results of a human in vivoLPS infusion study. BMC Medical Genomics, 4(1), 1-8. |
Abstract: | Background: It is widely accepted that atherosclerosis and inflammation are intimately linked. Monocytes play a
key role in both of these processes and we hypothesized that activation of inflammatory pathways in monocytes
would lead to, among others, proatherogenic changes in the monocyte transcriptome. Such differentially
expressed genes in circulating monocytes would be strong candidates for further investigation in disease
association studies Methods: Endotoxin, lipopolysaccharide (LPS), or saline control was infused in healthy volunteers. Monocyte RNA was isolated, processed and hybridized to Hver 2.1.1 spotted cDNA microarrays. Differential expression of key genes was confirmed by RT-PCR and results were compared to in vitro data obtained by our group to identify candidate genes Results: All subjects who received LPS experienced the anticipated clinical response indicating successful stimulation. One hour after LPS infusion, 11 genes were identified as being differentially expressed; 1 down regulated and 10 up regulated. Four hours after LPS infusion, 28 genes were identified as being differentially expressed; 3 being down regulated and 25 up regulated. No genes were significantly differentially expressed following saline infusion. Comparison with results obtained in in vitro experiments lead to the identification of 6 strong candidate genes (BATF, BID, C3aR1, IL1RN, SEC61B and SLC43A3) Conclusion: In vivo endotoxin exposure of healthy individuals resulted in the identification of several candidate genes through which systemic inflammation links to atherosclerosis. |
URI: | https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/92698 |
Appears in Collections: | Scholarly Works - FacHScABS |
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File | Description | Size | Format | |
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Identification of candidate genes linking systemic inflammation to atherosclerosis.pdf | 535.82 kB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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