Osteogenic regulation of vascular calcification: an early perspective
Top Cited Papers
- 1 May 2004
- journal article
- review article
- Published by American Physiological Society in American Journal of Physiology-Endocrinology and Metabolism
- Vol. 286 (5) , E686-E696
- https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpendo.00552.2003
Abstract
Cardiovascular calcification is a common consequence of aging, diabetes, hypercholesterolemia, mechanically abnormal valve function, and chronic renal insufficiency. Although vascular calcification may appear to be a uniform response to vascular insult, it is a heterogenous disorder, with overlapping yet distinct mechanisms of initiation and progression. A minimum of four histoanatomic variants—atherosclerotic (fibrotic) calcification, cardiac valve calcification, medial artery calcification, and vascular calciphylaxis—arise in response to metabolic, mechanical, infectious, and inflammatory injuries. Common to the first three variants is a variable degree of vascular infiltration by T cells and macrophages. Once thought benign, the deleterious clinical consequences of calcific vasculopathy are now becoming clear; stroke, amputation, ischemic heart disease, and increased mortality are portended by the anatomy and extent of calcific vasculopathy. Along with dystrophic calcium deposition in dying cells and lipoprotein deposits, active endochondral and intramembranous (nonendochondral) ossification processes contribute to vascular calcium load. Thus vascular calcification is subject to regulation by osteotropic hormones and skeletal morphogens in addition to key inhibitors of passive tissue mineralization. In response to oxidized lipids, inflammation, and mechanical injury, the microvascular smooth muscle cell becomes activated. Orthotopically, proliferating stromal myofibroblasts provide osteoprogenitors for skeletal growth and fracture repair; however, in valves and arteries, vascular myofibroblasts contribute to cardiovascular ossification. Current data suggest that paracrine signals are provided by bone morphogenetic protein-2, Wnts, parathyroid hormone-related polypeptide, osteopontin, osteoprotegerin, and matrix Gla protein, all entrained to endocrine, metabolic, inflammatory, and mechanical cues. In end-stage renal disease, a “perfect storm” of vascular calcification often occurs, with hyperglycemia, hyperphosphatemia, hypercholesterolemia, hypertension, parathyroid hormone resistance, and iatrogenic calcitriol excess contributing to severe calcific vasculopathy. This brief review recounts emerging themes in the pathobiology of vascular calcification and highlights some fundamental deficiencies in our understanding of vascular endocrinology and metabolism that are immediately relevant to human health and health care.Keywords
This publication has 126 references indexed in Scilit:
- BMP treatment of C3H10T1/2 mesenchymal stem cells induces both chondrogenesis and osteogenesisJournal of Cellular Biochemistry, 2003
- Activation-independent Parathyroid Hormone Receptor Internalization Is Regulated by NHERF1 (EBP50)Journal of Biological Chemistry, 2003
- Bone Morphogenic Protein 4 Produced in Endothelial Cells by Oscillatory Shear Stress Stimulates an Inflammatory ResponseJournal of Biological Chemistry, 2003
- Valvular and thoracic aortic calcium as a marker of the extent and severity of angiographic coronary artery diseaseAmerican Heart Journal, 2003
- Regulation of renin expression and blood pressure by vitamin D3Journal of Clinical Investigation, 2002
- Global and societal implications of the diabetes epidemicNature, 2001
- Msx2 is a repressor of chondrogenic differentiation in migratory cranial neural crest cells†Developmental Dynamics, 2001
- A role for Smad6 in development and homeostasis of the cardiovascular systemNature Genetics, 2000
- Spontaneous calcification of arteries and cartilage in mice lacking matrix GLA proteinNature, 1997
- Tumor necrosis factor‐alpha induces vitamin D‐1‐hydroxylase activity in normal human alveolar macrophagesJournal of Cellular Physiology, 1990