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(American Journal of Pathology. 2002;161:115-123.)
© 2002 American Society for Investigative Pathology


Regular Articles

Reactive Nitrogen Intermediates in Giant Cell Arteritis

Selective Nitration of Neocapillaries

Astrid Borkowski*, Brian R. Younge{dagger}, Luke Szweda{ddagger}, Bettina Mock*, Johannes Björnsson§, Kerstin Moeller*, Jörg J. Goronzy* and Cornelia M. Weyand*

From the Departments of Medicine and Immunology,*Ophthalmology,{dagger}and Laboratory Medicine and Pathology,§Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota; and the Department of Physiology and Biophysics,{ddagger}Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio

Arterial wall damage in giant cell arteritis (GCA) is mediated by several different macrophage effector functions, including the production of metalloproteinases and lipid peroxidation. Tissue-invading macrophages also express nitric oxide synthase (NOS)-2, but it is not known whether nitric oxide-related mechanisms contribute to the disease process. Nitric oxide can form nitrating agents, including peroxynitrite, a nitric oxide congener formed in the presence of reactive oxygen intermediates. Protein nitration selectively targets tyrosine residues and can result in a gain, as well as a loss, of protein function. Nitrated tyrosine residues in GCA arteries were detected almost exclusively on endothelial cells of newly formed microcapillaries in the media, whereas microvessels in the adventitia and the intima were spared. Nitration correlated with endothelial NOS-3 expression and not with NOS-2-producing macrophages, which preferentially homed to the hyperplastic intima. The restriction of nitration to the media coincided with the production of reactive oxygen intermediates as demonstrated by the presence of the toxic aldehyde, 4-hydroxynonenal. Depletion of tissue-infiltrating macrophages in human temporal artery-SCID mouse chimeras disrupted nitrotyrosine generation, demonstrating a critical role of macrophages in the nitration process that targeted medial microvessels. Thus, protein nitration in GCA is highly compartmentalized, reflecting the production of reactive oxygen and reactive nitrogen intermediates in the inflamed arterial wall. Heterogeneity of microvessels in NOS-3 regulation may be an additional determinant contributing to this compartmentalization and could explain the preferential targeting of newly generated capillary beds.





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