Acute mental stress drives vascular inflammation and promotes plaque destabilization in mouse atherosclerosis
European Heart Journal

Abstract
Mental stress substantially contributes to the initiation and progression of human disease, including cardiovascular conditions. We aim to investigate the underlying mechanisms of these contributions since they remain largely unclear.
Here, we show in humans and mice that leucocytes deplete rapidly from the blood after a single episode of acute mental stress. Using cell-tracking experiments in animal models of acute mental stress, we found that stress exposure leads to prompt uptake of inflammatory leucocytes from the blood to distinct tissues including heart, lung, skin, and, if present, atherosclerotic plaques. Mechanistically, we found that acute stress enhances leucocyte influx into mouse atherosclerotic plaques by modulating endothelial cells. Specifically, acute stress increases adhesion molecule expression and chemokine release through locally derived norepinephrine. Either chemical or surgical disruption of norepinephrine signalling diminished stress-induced leucocyte migration into mouse atherosclerotic plaques.
Our data show that acute mental stress rapidly amplifies inflammatory leucocyte expansion inside mouse atherosclerotic lesions and promotes plaque vulnerability.
Contributors

Julia Hinterdobler
Author

, Simin Schott
Author

Hong Jin
Author

Almut Meesmann
Author

Anna-Lena Steinsiek
Author

Anna-Sophia Zimmermann
Author

Jana Wobst
Author

Philipp Müller
Author

Carina Mauersberger
Author

Baiba Vilne
Author

Alexandra Baecklund
Author

Chien-Sin Chen
Author

Aldo Moggio
Author

Quinte Braster
Author

Michael Molitor
Author

Markus Krane
Author

Wolfgang E Kempf
Author

Karl-Heinz Ladwig
Author

Michael Hristov
Author

Maarten Hulsmans
Author

Christoph Scheiermann
Author

Lars Maegdefessel
Author

Oliver Soehnlein
Author

Peter Libby
Author

Matthias Nahrendorf
Author

Heribert Schunkert
Author

Thorsten Kessler
Author




