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Haptoglobin Phenotype May Alter Endothelial Progenitor Cell Cluster Formation in Cerebral Small Vessel Disease

Authors :
J. W. Cohen Tervaert
Rob P.W. Rouhl
Julie Staals
L. Debrus-Palmans
Iris L.H. Knottnerus
Ruud Theunissen
R. J. van Oostenbrugge
J. Damoiseaux
Jan Lodder
Joris R. Delanghe
Source :
Current Neurovascular Research. 6:32-41
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd., 2009.

Abstract

Cerebral small vessel disease results in silent ischemic lesions (SIL) among which is leukoaraiosis. In this process, endothelial damage is probably involved. Endothelial progenitor cells (EPC), are involved in endothelial repair. By restoring the damaged endothelium, EPC could mitigate SIL and cerebral small vessel disease. Haptoglobin 1-1, one of three phenotypes of haptoglobin, relates to SIL and may therefore attenuate the endothelial repair by EPC. Our aim was to quantify EPC number and function and to assess haptoglobin phenotype and its effect on EPC function in patients with a high prevalence of SIL: lacunar stroke patients. We assessed EPC In 42 lacunar stroke patients and 18 controls by flow cytometry and culture with fetal calf serum, patient and control serum. We determined haptoglobin phenotype and cultured EPC with the three different haptoglobin phenotypes. We found that EPC cluster counts were lower in patients (96.9 clusters/well +/- 83.4 (mean +/- SD)), especially in those with SIL (85.0 +/- 64.3), than in controls (174.4 +/- 112.2). Cluster formation was inhibited by patient serum, especially by SIL patient serum, but not by control serum. Patients with haptoglobin 1-1 had less clusters in culture, and when haptoglobin 1-1 was added to EPC cultures, cluster numbers were lower than with the other haptoglobin phenotypes. We conclude that lacunar stroke patients, especially those with SIL, have impaired EPC cluster formation, which may point at decreased endothelial repair potential. The haptoglobin 1-1 phenotype is likely a causative factor in this impairment.

Details

ISSN :
15672026
Volume :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Current Neurovascular Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b45bf4bc34364b7038502e1c93bffba1
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2174/156720209787466082