Presented by Associate Professor Andrew J Murphy, CSL Centenary Fellow, Baker Heart and Diabetes Institute
Western diets typically contain high
levels of salt (NaCl), which is linked to an increase in all-cause mortality1,
primarily due to cardiovascular disease (CVD). The relationship between a high
salt diet (HSD) and CVD has generally been attributed to hypertension, however
this association remains controversial and is not necessarily exclusive. Here
we show that HSD can promote an unstable atherosclerotic lesion due to effects
on haematopoiesis that enhances lipid-loaded macrophages in the plaque. Indeed,
increased circulating monocytes are a causal and independent risk-factor for
CVD. Mechanistically, mice fed a HSD displayed monocytosis, driven by
haematopoietic stem and progenitor cell (HSPC) mobilisation and extramedullary
myelopoiesis in the spleen. This process was initiated by enhanced TH17
maturation, which promoted osteoclastogenesis in the bone marrow. The enhanced
osteoclasts degraded the HSPC endosteal niche and decreased osteoblast-lineage
cells, the combined effects of which liberated HSPCs into the circulation.
Targeting TH17 maturation or preserving the endosteal niche,
prevented HSPC mobilisation and monocytosis, resulting in smaller
atherosclerotic lesions. Our results reveal an immune-driven mechanism for
HSD-accelerated CVD, independent of hypertension.
Associate Professor
Andrew Murphy heads of the Haematopoiesis and Leukocyte Biology laboratory and
the Division of Immunometabolism at the Baker Heart Research Institute. He is a
NHMRC Career Development Fellow and National Heart Foundation Future Leader
Fellow, recipient of a CSL Centenary Award. Andrew completed is PhD in 2008 in
Prof Jaye Chin-Dusting’s laboratory at the Baker and postdoc’d in Prof. Alan
Tall’s group at Columbia University. In 2013 he returned to Australia to begin
his own group. His work largely focuses on how inflammatory diseases associated
with cardiovascular disease, including diabetes, obesity and rheumatoid
arthritis cause the overproduction of innate immune cells and how this
contributes to atherogenesis or impaired lesion regression. Furthermore, his
laboratory studies fundamental biological process regulating haematopoiesis. He
has published a number of manuscripts in leading journals including Nature
Medicine, Cell Stem Cell, Cell Metabolism and the JCI. He currently holds 2
NHMRC project grants and an ASTAR-NHMRC obesity grant.
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