National Institutes of Health (NIH) - USA NIH National Heart Lung & Blood Institute
(NHLBI)(K01 HL149984)
Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, Japan (MEXT) Japan
Society for th...(JP20H03762)
Hereditary aortic diseases (hADs) increase the risk of aortic dissections and ruptures.
Recently, we have established an objective approach to measure the rupture force of
the murine aorta, thereby explaining the outcomes of clinical studies and assessing
the added value of approved drugs in vascular Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (vEDS). Here,
we applied our approach to six additional mouse hAD models. We used two mouse models
(Fbn1C1041G and Fbn1mgR ) of Marfan syndrome (MFS) as well as one smooth-muscle-cell-specific
knockout (SMKO) of Efemp2 and three CRISPR/Cas9-engineered knock-in models (Ltbp1,
Mfap4, and Timp1). One of the two MFS models was subjected to 4-week-long losartan
treatment. Per mouse, three rings of the thoracic aorta were prepared, mounted on
a tissue puller, and uniaxially stretched until rupture. The aortic rupture force
of the SMKO and both MFS models was significantly lower compared with wild-type mice
but in both MFS models higher than in mice modeling vEDS. In contrast, the Ltbp1,
Mfap4, and Timp1 knock-in models presented no impaired aortic integrity. As expected,
losartan treatment reduced aneurysm formation but surprisingly had no impact on the
aortic rupture force of our MFS mice. Our read-out system can characterize the aortic
biomechanical integrity of mice modeling not only vEDS but also related hADs, allowing
the aortic-rupture-force-focused comparison of mouse models. Furthermore, aneurysm
progression alone may not be a sufficient read-out for aortic rupture, as antihypertensive
drugs reducing aortic dilatation might not strengthen the weakened aortic wall. Our
results may enable identification of improved medical therapies of hADs.