Perlecan-Induced Suppression of Smooth Muscle Cell Proliferation Is Mediated Through Increased Activity of the Tumor Suppressor PTEN
- 6 February 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Circulation Research
- Vol. 94 (2) , 175-183
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.res.0000109791.69181.b6
Abstract
We were interested in the elucidation of the interaction between the heparan sulfate proteoglycan, perlecan, and PTEN in the regulation of vascular smooth muscle cell (SMC) growth. We verified serum-stimulated DNA synthesis, and Akt and FAK phosphorylation were significantly reduced in SMCs overexpressing wild-type PTEN. Our previous studies showed perlecan is a potent inhibitor of serum-stimulated SMC growth. We report in the present study, compared with SMCs plated on fibronectin, serum-stimulated SMCs plated on perlecan exhibited increased PTEN activity, decreased FAK and Akt activities, and high levels of p27, consistent with SMC growth arrest. Adenoviral-mediated overexpression of constitutively active Akt reversed perlecan-induced SMC growth arrest while morpholino antisense-mediated loss of endogenous PTEN resulted in increased growth and phosphorylation of FAK and Akt of SMCs on perlecan. Immunohistochemical and Western analyses of balloon-injured rat carotid artery tissues showed a transient increase in phosphoPTEN (inactive) after injury, correlating to high rates of neointimal cell replication; phosphoPTEN was largely limited to actively replicating SMCs. Similarly, in the developing rat aorta, we found increased PTEN activity associated with increased perlecan deposition and decreased SMC replication rates. However, significantly decreased PTEN activity was detected in aortas of perlecan-deficient mouse embryos, consistent with SMC hyperplasia observed in these animals, compared with E17.5 heterozygous controls that produce abundant amounts of perlecan at this developmental time point. Our data show PTEN is a potent endogenously produced inhibitor of SMC growth and increased PTEN activity mediates perlecan-induced suppression of SMC proliferation.Keywords
This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit:
- Perlecan Up-Regulation of FRNK Suppresses Smooth Muscle Cell Proliferation via Inhibition of FAK SignalingMolecular Biology of the Cell, 2003
- Changes in Perlecan Expression During Vascular InjuryArteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology, 2003
- Phosphorylation of the PTEN Tail Acts as an Inhibitory Switch by Preventing Its Recruitment into a Protein ComplexJournal of Biological Chemistry, 2001
- High cancer susceptibility and embryonic lethality associated with mutation of the PTEN tumor suppressor gene in miceCurrent Biology, 1998
- Developmental regulation of Perlecan gene expression in aortic smooth muscle cellsMatrix Biology, 1996
- The Degradation of Human Endothelial Cell-derived Perlecan and Release of Bound Basic Fibroblast Growth Factor by Stromelysin, Collagenase, Plasmin, and HeparanasesJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1996
- Basement membrane complexes with biological activityBiochemistry, 1986
- An antiproliferative heparan sulfate species produced by postconfluent smooth muscle cells.The Journal of cell biology, 1985
- Cultured endothelial cells produce heparinlike inhibitor of smooth muscle cell growthThe Journal of cell biology, 1981
- Suppression by heparin of smooth muscle cell proliferation in injured arteriesNature, 1977