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Conditional Deletion of Bmal1 Accentuates Microvascular and Macrovascular Injury.

Citation
Bhatwadekar, A. D., et al. “Conditional Deletion Of Bmal1 Accentuates Microvascular And Macrovascular Injury.”. The American Journal Of Pathology, pp. 1426-1435.
Center University of Michigan
Author Ashay D Bhatwadekar, Eleni Beli, Yanpeng Diao, Jonathan Chen, Qianyi Luo, Alpha Alex, Sergio Caballero, James M Dominguez, Tatiana E Salazar, Julia Busik V, Mark S Segal, Maria B Grant
Abstract

The brain and muscle aryl hydrocarbon receptor nuclear translocator-like protein (BMAL)-1 constitutes a major transcriptional regulator of the circadian clock. Here, we explored the impact of conditional deletion of Bmal1 in endothelium and hematopoietic cells in murine models of microvascular and macrovascular injury. We used two models of Bmal1;Tek-Cre mice, a retinal ischemia/reperfusion model and a neointimal hyperplasia model of the femoral artery. Eyes were enumerated for acellular capillaries and were stained for oxidative damage markers using nitrotyrosine immunohistochemistry. LSK (lineage-negative, stem cell antigen-1-positive, c-Kit-positive) cells were quantified and proliferation assessed. Hematopoiesis is influenced by innervation to the bone marrow, which we assessed using IHC analysis. The number of acellular capillaries increased threefold, and nitrotyrosine staining increased 1.5-fold, in the retinas of Bmal1;Tek-Cre mice. The number of LSK cells from the Bmal1;Tek-Cre mice decreased by 1.5-fold and was accompanied by a profound decrease in proliferative potential. Bmal1;Tek-Cre mice also exhibited evidence of bone marrow denervation, demonstrating a loss of neurofilament-200 staining. Injured femoral arteries showed a 20% increase in neointimal hyperplasia compared with similarly injured wild-type controls. Our study highlights the importance of the circadian clock in maintaining vascular homeostasis and demonstrates that specific deletion of BMAL1 in endothelial and hematopoietic cells results in phenotypic features similar to those of diabetes.

Year of Publication
2017
Journal
The American journal of pathology
Volume
187
Issue
6
Number of Pages
1426-1435
Date Published
06/2017
ISSN Number
1525-2191
DOI
10.1016/j.ajpath.2017.02.014
Alternate Journal
Am. J. Pathol.
PMID
28432873
PMCID
PMC5455061
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