Literature DB >> 9925366

Vascular remodeling and altered protein expression during growth of coronary collateral arteries.

C Wolf1, W J Cai, R Vosschulte, S Koltai, D Mousavipour, D Scholz, A Afsah-Hedjri, W Schaper, J Schaper.   

Abstract

The cellular mechanism of growth of coronary collateral vessels (adaptive arteriogenesis) is still poorly understood. To define a possible role of an altered expression pattern of cellular and matrix proteins in this process we implanted a constricting device around the left circumflex artery in 25 canine hearts and sacrificed the animals at the time of initiation (3 weeks), high activity (6 weeks) and discontinuation (8 weeks) of vessel growth. Methods were electron microscopy, labeling with Ki-67, the TUNEL method and immunofluorescence with confocal laser microscopy. As described earlier, the collateral vessels increased in wall thickness by the formation of a neointima without luminal narrowing. We report here for the first time that extensive vascular remodeling including migration, proliferation and apoptosis in all cell types takes place during the growth phase but not in more mature vessels. The most obvious difference with normal vessels is the reiteration of an embryonal expression pattern in smooth muscle cells of the neointima which includes a significant reduction of desmin and alpha-smooth muscle actin, calponin and vinculin. Fibronectin as a promoter of migration and adhesion was abundant, its antagonist tenascin and chondroitin sulfate showed patchy localization. A completely new finding in arteriogenesis is the involvement of mast cells releasing histamine and serotonin and probably cytokines. Vascular protein expression returned to almost normal at 8 weeks indicating cessation of remodeling. We conclude that in collateral vessel development an altered cellular and matrix protein expression is involved in a drastic case of positive vascular remodeling finally resulting in mature vessels 20-fold increased in size which are capable of maintaining the functional and structural integrity of the myocardium at risk.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9925366     DOI: 10.1006/jmcc.1998.0790

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Mol Cell Cardiol        ISSN: 0022-2828            Impact factor:   5.000


  30 in total

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