Literature DB >> 12937145

Vascular smooth muscle cells orchestrate the assembly of type I collagen via alpha2beta1 integrin, RhoA, and fibronectin polymerization.

Shaohua Li1, Caroline Van Den Diepstraten, Sudhir J D'Souza, Bosco M C Chan, J Geoffrey Pickering.   

Abstract

Assembly of collagen into fibrils is widely studied as a spontaneous and entropy-driven process. To determine whether vascular smooth muscle cells (SMCs) impact the formation of collagen fibrils, we microscopically tracked the conversion of soluble to insoluble collagen in human SMC cultures, using fluorescent type I collagen at concentrations less than that which supported self-assembly. Collagen microaggregates were found to form on the cell surface, initially as punctate collections and then as an increasingly intricate network of fibrils. These fibrils displayed 67-nm periodicity and were found in membrane-delimited cellular invaginations. Fibril assembly was inhibited by an anti-alpha2beta1 integrin antibody and accelerated by an alpha2beta1 integrin antibody that stimulates a high-affinity binding state. Newly assembled collagen fibrils were also found to co-localize with newly assembled fibronectin fibrils. Moreover, inhibition of fibronectin assembly with an anti-alpha5beta1 integrin antibody completely inhibited collagen assembly. Collagen fibril formation was also linked to the cytoskeleton. Fibrils formed on the stretched tails of SMCs, ran parallel to actin microfilament bundles, and formed poorly on SMCs transduced with retrovirus containing cDNA for dominant-negative RhoA and robustly on SMCs expressing constitutively active RhoA. Lysophosphatidic acid, which activates RhoA and stimulates fibronectin assembly, stimulated collagen fibril formation, establishing for the first time that collagen polymerization can be regulated by soluble agonists of cell function. Thus, collagen fibril formation is under close cellular control and is dynamically integrated with fibronectin assembly, opening new possibilities for modifying collagen deposition.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12937145      PMCID: PMC1868248          DOI: 10.1016/s0002-9440(10)63464-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Pathol        ISSN: 0002-9440            Impact factor:   4.307


  41 in total

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  58 in total

1.  Substrate-induced phenotypic switches of human smooth muscle cells: an in vitro study of in-stent restenosis activation pathways.

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Journal:  Tissue Eng Part A       Date:  2011-03-03       Impact factor: 3.845

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Authors:  Mark S Filla; Kaylee D Dimeo; Tiegang Tong; Donna M Peters
Journal:  Exp Eye Res       Date:  2017-08-30       Impact factor: 3.467

7.  Microvessel vascular smooth muscle cells contribute to collagen type I deposition through ERK1/2 MAP kinase, alphavbeta3-integrin, and TGF-beta1 in response to ANG II and high glucose.

Authors:  Souad Belmadani; Mourad Zerfaoui; Hamid A Boulares; Desiree I Palen; Khalid Matrougui
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Authors:  Heena Kumra; Valentin Nelea; Hana Hakami; Amelie Pagliuzza; Jelena Djokic; Jiongci Xu; Hiromi Yanagisawa; Dieter P Reinhardt
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2019-09-23       Impact factor: 11.205

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Authors:  Amy D Bradshaw
Journal:  J Cell Commun Signal       Date:  2009-10-02       Impact factor: 5.782

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