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Colchicine exerts anti-atherosclerotic and -plaque-stabilizing effects targeting foam cell formation.

Nisha SchwarzSanuja FernandoYung-Chih ChenThalia SalagarasSushma R RaoSanuri LiyanageAnna E WilliamsonDeborah Toledo-FloresCatherine DimasiTimothy J SargeantJim ManavisEleanor EddyPeter KanellakisPeter L ThompsonJoanne T M TanMarten F SnelChristina A BursillStephen J NichollsKarlheinz PeterPeter James Psaltis
Published in: FASEB journal : official publication of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology (2023)
Colchicine is a broad-acting anti-inflammatory agent that has attracted interest for repurposing in atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. Here, we studied its ability at a human equivalent dose of 0.5 mg/day to modify plaque formation and composition in murine atherosclerosis and investigated its actions on macrophage responses to atherogenic stimuli in vitro. In atherosclerosis induced by high-cholesterol diet, Apoe -/- mice treated with colchicine had 50% reduction in aortic oil Red O + plaque area compared to saline control (p = .001) and lower oil Red O + staining of aortic sinus lesions (p = .03). In vitro, addition of 10 nM colchicine inhibited foam cell formation from murine and human macrophages after treatment with oxidized LDL (ox-LDL). Mechanistically, colchicine downregulated glycosylation and surface expression of the ox-LDL uptake receptor, CD36, and reduced CD36 + staining in aortic sinus plaques. It also decreased macrophage uptake of cholesterol crystals, resulting in lower intracellular lysosomal activity, inhibition of the NLRP3 inflammasome, and reduced secretion of IL-1β and IL-18. Colchicine's anti-atherosclerotic actions were accentuated in a mouse model of unstable plaque induced by carotid artery tandem stenosis surgery, where it decreased lesion size by 48% (p = .01), reduced lipid (p = .006) and necrotic core area (p = .007), increased collagen content and cap-to-necrotic core ratio (p = .05), and attenuated plaque neutrophil extracellular traps (p < .001). At low dose, colchicine's effects were not accompanied by the evidence of microtubule depolymerization. Together, these results show that colchicine exerts anti-atherosclerotic and plaque-stabilizing effects at low dose by inhibiting foam cell formation and cholesterol crystal-induced inflammation. This provides a new framework to support its repurposing for atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease.
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