Atherosclerosis

Atherosclerosis is the main cause of cardiovascular pathology, as well as morbidity and mortality worldwide. A large number of studies have shown that atherothrombosis is a chronic inflammatory disease, also an autoimmune disease, caused and maintained by the migration,proliferation and activation of immune cells.
A number of key signaling pathways are highly relevant to atherogenesis and are presented to provide a context for the gene manipulations summarized herein. The pathways include the following: the insulin receptor (and other receptor tyrosine kinases); Ras and MAPK activation; TNF-α and related family members leading to activation of NF-B; effects of reactive oxygen species (ROS) on signaling; endothelial adaptations to flow including G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) and integrin-related signaling; activation of endothelial and other cells by modified lipoproteins; purinergic signaling; control of leukocyte adhesion to endothelium, migration, and further activation; foam cell formation; and macrophage and vascular smooth muscle cell signaling related to proliferation, efferocytosis, and apoptosis.

References

1.Paul N. Hopkins, et al. Physiol Rev 93: 1317–1542, 2013.