| Literature DB >> 26022334 |
Haibo Song1, Hui Wang1, Weiwei Wu1, Lei Qi1, Lei Shao1, Fang Wang1, Yimu Lai2, Desiree Leach2, Bryan Mathis2, Joseph S Janicki2, Xing Li Wang1, Dongqi Tang3,4, Taixing Cui5,6.
Abstract
Proliferative or synthetic vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) are widely accepted to be mainly derived from the dedifferentiation or phenotypic modulation of mature contractile VSMCs, i.e., a phenotype switch from a normally quiescent and contractile type into a proliferative or synthetic form. However, this theory has been challenged by recent evidence that synthetic VSMCs predominantly originate instead from media-derived multipotent vascular stem cells (MVSCs). To test these hypotheses further, we re-examine whether the conventional rat aortic SMC (RASMC) culture involves the VSMC differentiation of MVSCs or the dedifferentiation of mature VSMCs and the potential mechanism for controlling the synthetic phenotype of RASMCs. We enzymatically isolated RASMCs and cultured the cells in both a regular growth medium (RGM) and a stem cell growth medium (SCGM). Regardless of culture conditions, only a small portion of freshly isolated RASMCs attaches, survives and grows slowly during the first 7 days of primary culture, while expressing both SMC- and MVSC-specific markers. RGM-cultured cells undergo a process of synthetic SMC differentiation, whereas SCGM-cultured cells can be differentiated into not only synthetic SMCs but also other somatic cells. Notably, compared with the RGM-cultured differentiated RASMCs, the SCGM-cultured undifferentiated cells exhibit the phenotype of MVSCs and generate greater amounts of reactive oxygen species (ROS) that act as a negative regulator of differentiation into synthetic VSMCs. Knockdown of phospholipase A2, group 7 (Pla2g7) suppresses ROS formation in the MVSCs while enhancing SMC differentiation of MVSCs. These results suggest that cultured synthetic VSMCs can be derived from the SMC differentiation of MVSCs with ROS as a negative regulator.Entities:
Keywords: Dedifferentiation; Differentiation; Multipotent vascular stem cells; Rat (male); Reactive oxygen species; Vascular smooth muscle cells
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26022334 DOI: 10.1007/s00441-015-2193-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Tissue Res ISSN: 0302-766X Impact factor: 5.249