Mechanical strain induces growth of vascular smooth muscle cells via autocrine action of PDGF.
Open Access
- 1 November 1993
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 123 (3) , 741-747
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.123.3.741
Abstract
The effect of cyclic mechanical strain on growth of neonatal rat vascular smooth muscle (VSM) cells were examined. Cells were grown on silicone elastomer plates subjected to cyclic strain (60 cycle/min) by application of a vacuum under the plates. A 48 h exposure to mechanical strain increased the basal rate of thymidine incorporation by threefold and increased cell number by 40% compared with cells grown on stationary rubber plates. Strain also increased the rate of thymidine incorporation in response to alpha-thrombin (from 15- to 33-fold), but not to PDGF. As determined by thymidine autoradiography, strain alone induced a fourfold increase in labeled nuclei at the periphery of dishes, where strain is maximal, and a 2-3-fold increase at the center of dishes. Strain appeared to induce the production of an autocrine growth factor(s), since conditioned medium from cells subjected to strain induced a fourfold increase in DNA synthesis in control cells. Western blots of medium conditioned on the cells subjected to strain indicate that the cells secrete both AA and BB forms of PDGF in response to strain. Northern blots of total cell RNA from cells exposed to strain for 24 h show increased steady-state level of mRNA for PDGF-A. Lastly, polyclonal antibodies to the AA form of PDGF reduced by 75% the mitogenic effect of strain and polyclonal antibodies to AB-PDGF reduced mitogenicity by 50%. Antibodies to bFGF did not significantly reduce the strain-induced thymidine incorporation. Thus, the mechanism of strain-induced growth appears to involve the intermediary action of secreted PDGF.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Dissociation between activation of growth-related genes and mitogenic responses of neonatal vascular smooth muscle cellsBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1991
- Mechanical stress stimulates aortic endothelial cells to proliferate.1987
- CYCLIC-AMP INHIBITS INCREASED COLLAGEN PRODUCTION BY CYCLICALLY STRETCHED SMOOTH-MUSCLE CELLS1987
- Mechanical stretching increases the number of cultured bone cells synthesizing DNA and alters their pattern of protein synthesisCalcified Tissue International, 1985
- A new vacuum-operated stress-providing instrument that applies static or variable duration cyclic tension or compression to cells in vitroJournal of Cell Science, 1985
- Mechanical stretching increases the number of epithelial cells synthesizing dna in cultureJournal of Cell Science, 1984
- Pulsed Doppler: diameter, blood flow velocity and volumic flow of the brachial artery in sustained essential hypertension.Circulation, 1981
- Glycoprotein, elastin, and collagen secretion by rat smooth muscle cells.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1979
- The control of cell division by tension or diffusionNature, 1978
- Cyclic Stretching Stimulates Synthesis of Matrix Components by Arterial Smooth Muscle Cells in VitroScience, 1976