Literature DB >> 1964158

Characteristics of human arterial smooth muscle cell cultures infected with cytomegalovirus.

J J Tumilowicz1.   

Abstract

Distinct, sequential events occurring during the destruction and simultaneous regrowth of human arterial smooth muscle cell (SMC) cultures infected with cytomegalovirus (CMV, AD169 strain) were characterized. The events were influenced by the typical phenotypic diversity reflecting relative states of differentiation of the SMC cultures. Progenitors of regeneration were a surviving population of small, undifferentiated or relatively undifferentiated SMCs. As these cells reached confluence focally, the number of cells reactive with antismooth muscle serum, i.e. differentiating, increased, and in some postconfluent foci the organization of SMCs resembled the topography of uninfected cultures. Thus, infected SMC cultures had a limited capacity to repopulate, to organize typically, and to differentiate. However, continuing cytopathic effects gradually destroyed much of the regrowth, and a relatively large, nondividing SMC with prominent cytoplasmic filaments, similar to SMCs in terminal, uninfected cultures, predominated. Infected cultures consisting overwhelmingly of the large terminal phenotype were far less productive of infectious CMV than cultures populated by SMCs with continuing capacity to divide. Gradually, cultures consisting of the terminal phenotype deteriorated as a result of sporadic cytopathic effects of CMV and an effect resembling "senescent" degeneration in uninfected, nondividing cultures in late passage. The infected, terminal phenotype could be a latent or persistent source of CMV antigen or nucleic acid-positive cells detected by different investigators in normal and in atheromatous, human tissue, assuming that it exists and survives for an extended period in vivo after infection of vascular SMC.

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Year:  1990        PMID: 1964158     DOI: 10.1007/bf02623691

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  In Vitro Cell Dev Biol        ISSN: 0883-8364


  14 in total

1.  Human vascular smooth muscle in culture. Growth and ultrastructure.

Authors:  M A Gimbrone; R S Cotran
Journal:  Lab Invest       Date:  1975-07       Impact factor: 5.662

Review 2.  Arterial smooth muscle. A multifunctional mesenchymal cell.

Authors:  G R Campbell; J H Campbell; J A Manderson; S Horrigan; R E Rennick
Journal:  Arch Pathol Lab Med       Date:  1988-10       Impact factor: 5.534

3.  Replication of cytomegalovirus in human arterial smooth muscle cells.

Authors:  J J Tumilowicz; M E Gawlik; B B Powell; J J Trentin
Journal:  J Virol       Date:  1985-12       Impact factor: 5.103

4.  Nucleic acid sequences of cytomegalovirus in cells cultured from human arterial tissue.

Authors:  B L Petrie; J L Melnick; E Adam; J Burek; C H McCollum; M E DeBakey
Journal:  J Infect Dis       Date:  1987-01       Impact factor: 5.226

5.  Characterization of a new human diploid cell strain, IMR-90.

Authors:  W W Nichols; D G Murphy; V J Cristofalo; L H Toji; A E Greene; S A Dwight
Journal:  Science       Date:  1977-04-01       Impact factor: 47.728

6.  Comparison of vascular smooth muscle cells from adult human, monkey and rabbit in primary culture and in subculture.

Authors:  J H Chamley; G R Campbell; J D McConnell; U Gröschel-Stewart
Journal:  Cell Tissue Res       Date:  1977-02-14       Impact factor: 5.249

7.  What controls smooth muscle phenotype?

Authors:  J H Chamley-Campbell; G R Campbell
Journal:  Atherosclerosis       Date:  1981 Nov-Dec       Impact factor: 5.162

8.  Cultivated human arterial smooth muscle displays heterogeneous pattern of growth and phenotypic variation.

Authors:  S Björkerud
Journal:  Lab Invest       Date:  1985-09       Impact factor: 5.662

9.  Cytomegalovirus antigen within human arterial smooth muscle cells.

Authors:  J L Melnick; B L Petrie; G R Dreesman; J Burek; C H McCollum; M E DeBakey
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  1983-09-17       Impact factor: 79.321

10.  Monoclonal antibody for rapid laboratory detection of cytomegalovirus infections: characterization and diagnostic application.

Authors:  E A Shuster; J S Beneke; G E Tegtmeier; G R Pearson; C A Gleaves; A D Wold; T F Smith
Journal:  Mayo Clin Proc       Date:  1985-09       Impact factor: 7.616

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  2 in total

1.  Cytomegalovirus infection of human arterial smooth muscle cell cultures can delay terminal passage.

Authors:  J J Tumilowicz
Journal:  In Vitro Cell Dev Biol       Date:  1991-11

2.  Nipah Virus Efficiently Replicates in Human Smooth Muscle Cells without Cytopathic Effect.

Authors:  Blair L DeBuysscher; Dana P Scott; Rebecca Rosenke; Victoria Wahl; Heinz Feldmann; Joseph Prescott
Journal:  Cells       Date:  2021-05-25       Impact factor: 6.600

  2 in total

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