Smooth Muscle Cells in Human Atherosclerotic Plaques Express the Fractalkine Receptor CX 3 CR1 and Undergo Chemotaxis to the CX 3 C Chemokine Fractalkine (CX 3 CL1)
Lucas AD., Bursill C., Guzik TJ., Sadowski J., Channon KM., Greaves DR.
Background— Chemokines are important mediators of inflammatory cell recruitment that play a significant role in atherosclerosis. Fractalkine (CX 3 CL1) is an unusual membrane-bound chemokine that mediates chemotaxis through the CX 3 CR1 receptor. Recently, functional polymorphisms in the human CX3CR1 gene have been described that are associated with coronary artery disease. Methods and Results— We investigated the expression of the CX 3 C chemokine fractalkine and its receptor CX 3 CR1 in human coronary artery plaques by immunocytometry. We show that a subset of mononuclear cells expresses high levels of fractalkine in human coronary atherosclerotic plaques and that smooth muscle cells within the neointima express the fractalkine receptor CX 3 CR1. There is a positive correlation between the number of fractalkine-expressing cells and the number of CX 3 CR1-positive cells in human atherosclerotic plaques ( r =0.70, n=15 plaques). Furthermore, we demonstrate that cultured vascular smooth muscle cells express the CX 3 CR1 receptor and undergo chemotaxis to fractalkine that can be inhibited by G protein inactivation by pertussis toxin. Conclusions— These results suggest that in human atherosclerosis, fractalkine, rather than mediating inflammatory cell recruitment, can act as a mediator of smooth muscle cell migration.