Adenoviral Activin A Expression Prevents Intimal Hyperplasia in Human and Murine Blood Vessels by Maintaining the Contractile Smooth Muscle Cell Phenotype
- 31 May 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Circulation Research
- Vol. 90 (10) , 1128-1134
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.res.0000021044.53156.f5
Abstract
Activin A alters the characteristics of human arterial smooth muscle cells (SMCs) toward a contractile, quiescent phenotype. We hypothesize that activin A may prevent SMC-rich neointimal hyperplasia. Here, we study the effect of adenovirus-mediated expression of activin A on neointima formation in vitro and in vivo. Human saphenous vein organ cultures, in which a neointima is formed spontaneously, were infected either with activin A- or lacZ-adenovirus. Activin A-overexpression reduces neointima formation by 78%, whereas no significant reduction was observed after control infection. In addition, the effect of activin A on neointima formation was assessed in vivo in mice with cuffed femoral arteries. In activin A adenovirus-infected mice (IV injection), neointimal hyperplasia is reduced by 77% compared with the SMC-rich neointima in mock-infected or in noninfected mice. Cultured human saphenous vein SMCs and murine aorta SMCs were incubated with activin A and an increased expression of SM22α and SM α-actin mRNA, and SM α-actin protein was demonstrated. Laser-capture microdissection on sections of cuffed murine arteries and subsequent real-time RT-PCR established in vivo induction of SM α-actin mRNA in the media of activin A–treated mice. In summary, activin A inhibits neointima formation in vitro and in vivo by preventing SMC dedifferentiation.Keywords
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