Editorials |
From the Department of Medicine (D.J.R.), University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, and Wistar Institute (E.P.), Philadelphia, Pa, and Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research (E.P.), New York, NY.
Correspondence to Dr Daniel J. Rader, University of Pennsylvania Medical Center, 614 BRBII/III, 421 Curie Blvd, Philadelphia, PA 19104. E-mail rader@mail.med.upenn.edu
Key Words: atherosclerosis genetics lipids inflammation
| Introduction |
|---|
Like humans, mouse strains differ considerably in their genetic
predisposition to atherosclerosis.2 Most
mouse strains are resistant to atherosclerosis
even when fed an atherogenic diet; the C3H strain is a
prototypical-resistant mouse strain. In contrast, C57BL/6J mice
have been extensively studied as the mouse strain that is most
susceptible to atherosclerosis when fed an atherogenic
high-fat, high-cholesterol, cholic acidcontaining
diet.3 Initially, the focus on C57BL/6J mice centered on
differences in plasma lipid levels, especially reduced HDL
cholesterol levels, in response to the atherogenic
diet4 and attempts to map gene loci linked to the
phenotype of low HDL cholesterol.5
However, previous studies did not distinguish whether these differences
in lipid profiles were restricted to particular dietary challenges or
reflect an underlying genetic factor that contributes
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