Genetically modified mice serve as a powerful tool to determine the role of specific molecules in a wide variety of biological phenomena including vascular remodeling. Several models of arterial injury have been proposed to analyze transgenic/knock-out mice, but many questions have been raised about their reproducibility and physiological significance. Here, we report a new mouse model of vascular injury that resembles balloon-angioplasty. A straight spring wire was inserted into the femoral artery via arterioctomy in a small muscular branch. The wire was left in place for one minute to denude and dilate the artery. After the wire was removed, the muscular branch was tied off and the blood flow of the femoral artery was restored. The lumen was enlarged with rapid onset of medial cell apoptosis. While the circumference of the external elastic lamina remained enlarged, the lumen was gradually narrowed by neointimal hyperplasia composed of smooth muscle cells. At 4 weeks, a concentric and homogeneous neointimal lesion was formed reproducibly in the region where the wire had been inserted. Similar exuberant hyperplasia could be induced in all strains examined (C57BL/6J, C3H/HeJ, BALB/c, and 129/SVj). This model may be widely used to study the molecular mechanism of post-angioplasty restenosis at the genetic level.
Copyright 2000 Academic Press.