Allograft Model of Aortic Arch Segment Grafting to Abdominal Aorta Through End-to-Side Anastomosis in Mice.
Chiyu LiuQi ChenMingyuan HeYulin LiaoPublished in: Journal of cardiovascular translational research (2024)
The mouse aortic transplantation model is a valuable tool for investigating the mechanisms of atherosclerosis regression, but few laboratories can generate it due to the operation difficulty, especially for the style of end-to-side anastomosis, which facilitates syngeneic heterotopic transplanting a plaque-rich aortic arch into the abdominal aorta. Here we provide a modified protocol for generating this allograft model, which is capable of overcoming several critical surgical challenges such as separating a longer abdominal aorta segment, reducing bleeding and thrombosis, optimizing aortotomy, and improving end-to-side anastomosis to guarantee a potent graft. By transplanting plaque-rich aortic arches into the abdominal aorta of wildtype mice, a high operation success rate (over 90%) was noted with aortic clamping time under 60 min, the graft potency was satisfactory evidenced by examinations of micro-CT, ultrasound, and lower limb blood flow measurement, while a significant atherosclerosis regression was observed in the grafts at 1 week after transplantation.
Keyphrases
- aortic valve
- pulmonary artery
- aortic dissection
- blood flow
- lower limb
- coronary artery
- pulmonary hypertension
- pulmonary arterial hypertension
- coronary artery disease
- left ventricular
- cardiovascular disease
- computed tomography
- randomized controlled trial
- high fat diet induced
- pulmonary embolism
- magnetic resonance imaging
- kidney transplantation
- bone marrow
- heart failure
- magnetic resonance
- adipose tissue
- contrast enhanced