Article

Tissue-specific relaxin-2 is differentially associated with the presence/size of an arterial aneurysm and the severity of atherosclerotic disease in humans

Konstantinos Papoutsis1, Alkistis Kapelouzou2, Georgios Georgiopoulos3, Christos Kontogiannis4, Christos Kourek3, Konstantinos S Mylonas3, Nikolaos Patelis1, Dennis V Cokkinos2, Ioannis Karavokyros1, Sotirios Georgopoulos1
1 First Department of Surgery, Vascular Unit, Laiko General Hospital, National & Kapodistrian University of Athens, 11527 Athens, Greece
2 Clinical, Experimental Surgery & Translational Research, Biomedical Research Foundation Academy of Athens, 11527 Athens, Greece
3 School of Medicine, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, 11527 Athens, Greece
4 Department of Clinical Therapeutics, “Alexandra” Hospital, School of Medicine, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Athens, Greece
Correspondence to: Christos Kontogiannis: kont_chr@hotmail.com,
DOI: 10.1038/s41401-019-0350-5
Received: 3 May 2019
Accepted: 12 December 2019
Advance online: 5 February 2020

Abstract

Circulating or tissue-related biomarkers are of clinical value for risk stratification in patients with abdominal aortic aneurysms. Relaxin-2 (RL2) has been linked to the presence and size of arterial aneurysms, and to the extent of atherosclerosis in human subjects. Here, we assessed the expression levels of RL2 in aneurysmal (AA, n = 16) and atherosclerotic (ATH, n = 22) arteries, and established the correlation between RL2 levels and the presence/size of AA and the clinical severity of atherosclerosis. The expression levels of metalloproteinases (MMPs) and endothelial nitric oxide synthetase (eNOS) were also detected for correlations with different phenotypes of atherosclerosis and AA. Temporal artery biopsy specimens (n = 6) and abdominal aortic tissues harvested from accident victims during autopsy (n = 10) were used as controls. Quantitative tissue biomarker analysis revealed that tissue-specific RL2 was increased in patients with larger or symptomatic AA compared to subjects with atherosclerotic disease and healthy controls. In situ RL2 levels were proportional to the size and the severity of aneurysmatic disease, and were substantially elevated in patients with symptomatic aneurysm of any diameter or asymptomatic aneurysm of a diameter >350% of that of the normal artery. In contrast, tissue RL2 was inversely associated with the clinical severity of atherosclerotic lesions. Correlation between RL2 and MMP2 was different between ATH1 and ATH2, depending on atherosclerosis grade. Overall, tissue RL2 is differentially associated with discrete phenotypes of arterial disease and might exert multipotent biological effects on vascular wall integrity and remodeling in human subjects.
Keywords: arterial aneurysm; atherosclerosis; endothelial dysfunction; relaxin-2; eNOS; MMPs; biomarkers

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