Literature DB >> 21341992

Elastogenic inductability of smooth muscle cells from a rat model of late stage abdominal aortic aneurysms.

Carmen E Gacchina1, Partha Deb, Jeremy L Barth, Anand Ramamurthi.   

Abstract

Although abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAA) can be potentially stabilized by inhibiting inflammatory cell recruitment and their release of proteolytic enzymes, active AAA regression is not possible without regeneration of new elastic matrix structures. Unfortunately, postneonatal vascular smooth muscle cells (SMCs), healthy, and likely more so, diseased cells, poorly synthesize or remodel elastic fibers, impeding any effort directed at regenerative AAA treatment. Previously, we determined the eleastogenic benefits of oligomers (HA-o; 4-6 mers) of the glycosaminoglycan, hyaluronan (HA) and transforming growth factor-β1 (TGF-β1) to healthy SMCs. Since AAAs are often diagnosed only late in development when matrix disruption is severe, we now determine if elastogenic upregulation of SMCs from late-stage AAAs (>100% diameter increase) is possible. AAAs were induced by perfusion of rat infrarenal aortae with porcine pancreatic elastase. Elastic matrix degradation, vessel expansion (∼120%), inflammatory cell infiltration, and enhanced activity of matrix-metalloproteases (MMPs) 2 and 9 resulted, paralleling human AAAs. Aneurysmal SMCs (EaRASMCs) maintained a diseased phenotype in 2D cell culture and exhibited patterns of gene expression different from healthy rat aortic SMCs (RASMCs). Relative to passage-matched healthy RASMCs, unstimulated EaRASMCs produced far less tropoelastin and matrix elastin. Exogenous TGF-β and HA-o (termed "factors") significantly decreased EaRASMC proliferation and enhanced tropoelastin synthesis, though only at the highest provided dose combination (20 mg/mL of HA-o, 10 ng/mL of TGF-β); despite such enhancement, tropoelastin amounts were only ∼40% of amounts synthesized by healthy RASMC cultures. Differently, elastic matrix synthesis was enhanced beyond amounts synthesized by healthy RASMCs (112%), even at lower doses of factors (2 mg/mL of HA-o and 5 ng/mL of TGF-β). The factors also enhanced elastic fiber deposition over untreated EaRASMC cultures and restored several genes whose expression was altered in EaRASMC cultures back to levels expressed by healthy RASMCs. However, the activity of MMPs 2 and 9 generated by EaRASMC cultures was unaffected by the factors/factor dose. The study confirms that SMCs from advanced AAAs can be elastogenically induced, although much higher doses of elastogenic factors are required for induction relative to healthy SMCs. Also, the factors do not appear to inhibit MMP activity, vital to preserve existing elastic matrix structures that serve as nucleation sites for new elastic fiber deposition. Thus, to enhance net accumulation of newly regenerated elastic matrix, toward possibly regressing AAAs, codelivery of MMP inhibitors may be necessitated.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21341992      PMCID: PMC3118732          DOI: 10.1089/ten.TEA.2010.0526

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Tissue Eng Part A        ISSN: 1937-3341            Impact factor:   3.845


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