Mechanisms modulating foam cell formation in the arterial intima: exploring new therapeutic opportunities in atherosclerosis
M. T. La Chica Lhoëst, A. Martinez, L. Claudi, E. Garcia, A. Benitez-Amaro, J. Piñero, D. Vilades, N. Rotllan, J. C. Escolà-Gil, V. Llorente-Cortés · Review article
BlueRipple Assessment
This review overturns a textbook assumption: that the foam cells choking an atherosclerotic plaque are mostly macrophages. Lineage-tracing studies say otherwise — more than half come from the artery’s own smooth-muscle cells.
The mechanism is a kind of cellular identity crisis. Loaded with lipid, smooth-muscle cells reprogram themselves — shedding their contractile markers and switching on macrophage-like genes (driven by the transcription factor KLF4) — to become foam cells that are worse at clearing cholesterol than true macrophages. The review also spotlights two upstream levers: an individual’s susceptibility to LDL aggregation (clumped LDL, not native LDL, drives uptake) and the receptor LRP1 that smuggles aggregated LDL into these cells.
The practical takeaway is a wider therapeutic map than “lower LDL-C”: targets like KLF4, LRP1, LDL-aggregation propensity (influenced by dietary fats), and reverse cholesterol transport (e.g., LCAT therapy in early trials). The resistance is an industry and clinical culture anchored to established LDL-lowering.
We rate the evidence solid for a mechanistic review: a comprehensive synthesis of lineage-tracing and single-cell data, though heavily reliant on mouse models and early-stage therapeutics. Its clinical significance is moderate — a genuine paradigm shift in plaque biology that could eventually guide new drugs, but whose clinical payoff is mostly still ahead.
The original source
La Chica Lhoëst MT, Martinez A, Claudi L, et al. Mechanisms modulating foam cell formation in the arterial intima: exploring new therapeutic opportunities in atherosclerosis. Front Cardiovasc Med. 2024 Jun 16;11:1381520. doi: 10.3389/fcvm.2024.1381520.
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