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Clinical and Experimental Immunology logoLink to Clinical and Experimental Immunology
. 1997 May;108(2):227–233. doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2249.1997.d01-1019.x

Oxidized low-density lipoprotein (Ox-LDL) but not LDL aggravates the manifestations of experimental antiphospholipid syndrome (APS)

J GEORGE *, M BLANK *, M HOJNIK *, E BAR-MEIR *, T KOIKE *, E MATSUURA *, M LORBER , M AVIRAM , Y SHOENFELD *
PMCID: PMC1904658  PMID: 9158090

Abstract

Ox-LDL is thought to play a major role in atherogenesis. The mechanisms mediating the deleterious influences of Ox-LDL include foam cell formation and cell cytotoxicity. The production of anti-Ox-LDL antibodies results in the formation of immune complexes which are taken up at enhanced rate by macrophages, leading to foam cell formation. APS is characterized by repeated venous and arterial thromboembolic phenomena, recurrent fetal loss and thrombocytopenia, associated with the presence of antibodies to negatively charged phospholipids (aPL) (i.e. cardiolipin, phosphatidylserine). Phospholipids bear structural resemblance to LDL, and several studies have indeed proved that aPL display cross-reactivity with anti-Ox-LDL antibodies. In this study we assessed the capacity of oxidized and native forms of LDL to aggravate the clinical picture of experimentally induced APS in naive mice. Mice were actively immunized intradermally with anticardiolipin antibodies and developed a clinical picture resembling APS in humans. Subsequently, the mice were infused with either Ox-LDL, native LDL or PBS, and similar regimens were applied to controls. APS mice infused with Ox-LDL were found to exhibit a significantly more severe form of the disease in comparison with native LDL- and PBS-infused mice, expressed by lower platelet counts (261 000/mm3, 535 000/mm3 and 455 000/mm3, respectively), longer activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT) (99 ± 12 s, 63 ± 8 s and 74 ± 8 s, respectively) and higher fetal resorption rates (72.7%, 34.4% and 32.6%, respectively). The results of this study show that Ox-LDL, compared with native LDL, aggravates the clinical manifestations of experimental APS and suggest that cross-reactivity of Ox-LDL with phospholipids may provide a pathogenic explanation for this effect.

Keywords: low-density lipoproteins, antiphospholipid syndrome, anticardiolipin antibodies, autoimmunity, autoantibodies

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