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1.
Red blood cell targeting to smooth muscle cells   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Monoclonal antibody discriminating between endothelial and smooth muscle cells is suggested to be used as a vector for directed transport of drugs to injured (denuded) areas of blood vessel wall. An in vitro model system was used in the studies: vascular smooth muscle or endothelial cells grown on plastic surface were treated with specific mouse monoclonal antibody recognizing an antigen localized on the surface of smooth muscle rather than endothelial cells; then erythrocytes coated with secondary (rabbit antimouse) antibodies were added. The results were analyzed spectrophotometrically or with scanning electron microscopy. Under the experimental conditions, erythrocytes, possible 'containers' for carrying the drugs, were found to bind only to smooth muscle cells. The data show that antibody provides absolute discrimination between endothelial and smooth muscle cells and, thus, may be used as a vector for drug targeting.  相似文献   

2.
Though previous studies have indicated a relationship between the proliferation of endothelial cells and vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) in co-culture, the results have been contradictory and the signaling mechanism poorly understood. In this transmembrane co-culture study, VSMCs and endothelial cells were grown to confluence on opposite sides of a microporous membrane to mimic the intima/media border of vessels. The endothelial layer was injured, and then cultured for 3 days, resulting in partial re-endothelialization. VSMC proliferation across from the injured/partially recovered endothelial region was significantly higher than across from the de-endothelialized region (a sevenfold increase) and the uninjured region (a threefold increase). ELISA indicated that PDGF, which was undetectable in uninjured co-culture and homotypic controls, increased after injury and the addition of a piperazinyl-quinazoline carboxamide PDGF receptor inhibitor blocked VSMC proliferation across from the injured/partially recovered region. We conclude that co-culture signaling initiated by endothelial cell injury locally stimulates VSMC proliferation and that this signaling could be mediated by PDGF-BB.  相似文献   

3.
Endothelial cell and smooth muscle cell cultures from artery wall provide a potential model system for studying cellular processes involved in atherogenesis. To prepare serial subcultures of swine arterial endothelial cells that are free of smooth muscle cells without either selecting a small population or subjecting the cells to cytotoxic conditions, we used swine plasma-derived serum (SPDS) to establish conditions in which endothelial cells have a growth advantage. Endothelial cells were collected by collagenase digestion and smooth muscle cell cultures were prepared by outgrowth from explants of arterial medial segments. Growth rates were compared when each cell type was maintained on SPDS, or fetal bovine serum (FBS), or swine whole serum (SWS). When 20% FBS or SWS were used the doubling times were less than 30 h for both endothelial cells and smooth muscle cells. On 20% SPDS the doubling time for endothelial cells was 32 h, but for smooth muscle cells it was at least 168 h. Using SPDS, we prepare endothelial subcultures from swine aorta that express principally polygonal morphology at confluence. Endothelial cell cultures grown on SPDS have higher angiotensin-converting enzyme than those grown on FBS.  相似文献   

4.
Results of previous in vivo experiments indicated that the presence of arterial endothelium modifies cholesteryl ester (CE) metabolism and the retention of low density lipoproteins (LDL) in injured arteries. We describe herein the effects of bovine arterial endothelial cells (ENDO) on the CE cycle, fluid phase endocytosis, and cell proliferation in co-cultured bovine arterial smooth muscle cells (SMC). Following several days of cultivation on confluent SMC, ENDO were removed from SMC by treatment of the co-cultures with 1.0% collagenase (type II). Removal of only ENDO from the co-culture dishes was confirmed by immunofluorescent staining for Factor VIII antigen, hemotoxylin-eosin staining, and biochemical analyses. We observed that ENDO grown to 75% confluency on confluent SMC induced: 1) a reduction of CE hydrolysis as a result of decreased lysosomal CE hydrolytic activity in SMC as compared to SMC cultured alone; and 2) an increase in the rate of incorporation of labeled oleate into CE as a result of increased acyl CoA:cholesterol O-acyltransferase activity in SMC as compared to SMC cultured alone. Neither endothelial cell-derived culture media (ECDM) nor fibroblasts modulated CE metabolism in co-cultured SMC. Additional experiments showed that the presence of endothelial cells or ECDM decreased the proliferation of co-cultured SMC by 50%, but enhanced the endocytotic rate of labeled sucrose into SMC threefold. Results of experiments described herein demonstrate that, in addition to providing a thrombo-resistant surface and regulating permeability, endothelial cells may also serve to modulate cholesteryl ester metabolism in smooth muscle cells derived from the arterial wall.  相似文献   

5.
Summary The growth, behavior, and contractile protein expression of rabbit aortic smooth muscle cells (SMC) grown on, between layers, or within a collagen gel was investigated by confocal laser scanning fluorescence microscopy and Western analysis. SMC grown on collagen gel behaved similarly to those on conventional culture dishes. However, when a second layer of collagen was overlaid, cells underwent an elongated quiescent phase before onset of proliferation and a more than threefold lower logarithmic growth rate was observed. These cells self-organized into a network with ring-like structures. With increasing culture time, some of the rings developed into funnel-like, incomplete or complete tubular structures. If a tubular template preexisted within the gel, the SMC established a cylinder-shaped tube with several circularly arranged muscular layers (similar to an artery wall). This behavior mimicked endothelial cells during angiogenesis in vitro. A similar phenomenon occurred in cultures in which SMC were randomly mixed in a collagen gel, but here their behavior and morphology varied with their position within the gel. Western blot analysis showed that the SMC differentiation marker, smooth muscle myosin heavy chain-2 (SM-2), rapidly decreased, disappearing by day 10 in SMC grown on collagen, but was still detectable until day 25 in cells cultured between or within the same gel. These findings indicate that like endothelial cells, vascular SMC can display blood vessel formation behavior in vitro when an appropriate three-dimensional matrix environment is provided to keep them in a relatively higher-differentiated and low-proliferative state.  相似文献   

6.
Summary Endothelial cell and smooth muscle cell cultures from artery wall provide a potential model system for studying cellular processes involved in atherogenesis. To prepare serial subcultures of swine arterial endothelial cells that are free of smooth muscle cells without either selecting a small population or subjecting the cells to cytotoxic conditions, we used swine plasma-derived serum (SPDS) to establish conditions in which endothelial cells have a growth advantage. Endothelial cells were collected by collagenase digestion and smooth muscle cell cultures were prepared by outgrowth from explants of arterial medial segments. Growth rates were compared when each cell type was maintained on SPDS, or fetal bovine serum (FBS), or swine whole serum (SWS). When 20% FBS or SWS were used the doubling times were <30 h for both endothelial cells and smooth muscle cells. On 20% SPDS the doubling time for endothelial cells was 32 h, but for smooth muscle cells it was at least 168 h. Using SPDS, we prepare endothelial subcultures from swine aorta that express principally polygonal morphology at confluence. Endothelial cell cultures grown on SPDS have higher angiotensin-converting enzyme than those grown on FBS. This work was supported by grants HL 22486 and HL 24660 from the National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland. Dr. Slakey is an Established Investigator of the American Heart Association. Portions of this work were presented at the 31st Annual Meeting of the Tissue Culture Association in St. Louis, Missouri.  相似文献   

7.
Endothelial cells (ECs), besides being a permeability barrier between the blood and vessel wall, perform many important functions, e.g., cell migration, remodeling, proliferation, and the production, secretion and metabolism of biochemical substances, as well as the regulation of contractility of vascular smooth muscle cells (SMCs). Their function is modulated by chemical ligands as well as mechanical factors. The mechanical stresses acting on the vessel wall include the normal and circumferential stresses that result from the action of blood pressure, the shear stress that acts parallel to the luminal surface of the vessel due to blood flow and the magnitude and orientation of the gravitation field. The aim of this work was to design and construct a novel bioreactor for the stimulation of endothelial cells in vitro with a combination of mechanical factors that simulates their in vivo environment.  相似文献   

8.
Using different endothelial/smooth muscle cell co-culture modes to simulate the intimal structure of blood vessels, the water filtration rate and the infiltration/accumulation of LDL of the cultured cell layers were studied. The three cell culture modes of the study were: (i) The endothelial cell monolayer (EC/Φ); (ii) endothelial cells directly co-cultured on the smooth muscle cell monolayer (EC-SMC); (iii) endothelial cells and smooth muscle cells cultured on different sides of a Millicell-CM membrane (EC/SMC). It was found that under the same condition, the water filtration rate was the lowest for the EC/SMC mode and the highest for the EC/Φ mode, while the infiltration/accumulation of DiI-LDLs was the lowest in the EC/Φ mode and the highest in the EC-SMC mode. It was also found that DiI-LDL infiltration/accumulation in the cultured cell layers increased with the increasing water filtration rate. The results from the in vitro model study therefore suggest that the infiltration/accumulation of the lipids within the arterial wall is positively correlated with concentration polarization of atherogenic lipids, and the integrity of the endothelium plays an important role in the penetration and accumulation of atherogenic lipids in blood vessel walls.  相似文献   

9.
Lipid transfer between endothelial and smooth muscle cells in coculture   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
A coculture system was employed to study the interactions between endothelium and vascular smooth muscle cells in arachidonic acid metabolism. Bovine aortic endothelial cells grown on micropore filters impregnated with gelatin and coated with fibronectin are mounted on polystyrene chambers and suspended over confluent smooth muscle cultures. The endothelial basal laminae are oriented toward the underlying smooth muscle, and the two layers are separated by only 1 mm. Each cell layer was assayed individually: apical and basolateral fluid also was collected separately for assay. Fatty acids, including arachidonic acid, are readily transferred between the endothelial and smooth muscle cells in this system. Distribution of the incorporated fatty acids among the lipids of each cell is the same as when the fatty acid is added directly to the culture medium. Arachidonic acid released from endothelial cells is available as a substrate for prostaglandin production by smooth muscle. In addition, fatty acids released from the smooth muscle cells can pass through the endothelium and accumulate in the fluid bathing the endothelial apical surface. These fatty acid interchanges may be involved in cell-cell signaling within the vascular wall, the clearance of lipids from the vascular wall, or the redistribution of arachidonic acid and other polyunsaturated fatty acids between adjacent cell types. Furthermore, the findings suggest that prostaglandin production by smooth muscle cells can occur in response to stimuli that cause arachidonic acid release from endothelial cells.  相似文献   

10.
A microcarrier co-culture system for aortic endothelial cells and smooth muscle cells (SMCs) was developed as a model for metabolic interactions between cells of the vessel wall. Low density lipoprotein (LDL) metabolism in SMCs was significantly influenced by co-culture with endothelium. The numbers of high affinity receptors for LDL was increased more than twofold (range, 2.1-5.6), with concomitant increases in LDL receptor-mediated endocytosis and degradation. These effects reached a plateau at an endothelial cell/SMC ratio of 1. Kinetic analysis of the endocytic pathway for LDL in SMCs indicated that, in co-culture with endothelium, there was no alteration in the binding affinity of LDL to its receptors but that the internalization rate constant declined and the rate constant for degradation increased. This analysis suggested that the formation and migration of endocytic vesicles was the rate-limiting step of enhanced LDL metabolism under co-culture conditions. Two mechanisms by which endothelial cells influenced smooth muscle LDL metabolism were identified. First, mitogen(s) derived from endothelial cells stimulated entry of SMCs into the growth cycle, and the changes in LDL metabolism occurred as a consequence of G1-S transition. Second, SMC lipoprotein metabolism was stimulated in the absence of mitogens by a low molecular weight (less than 3,500) factor or factors. Co-culture was a required condition for the latter effect, suggesting that the mediator(s) may be unstable or that cell-cell communication was necessary for expression. These results (a) demonstrate that vascular cell interactions can modify LDL metabolism in SMCs, (b) provide some insights into the mechanisms responsible, and (c) identify co-culture as an experimental approach appropriate to certain aspects of vascular cell biology.  相似文献   

11.
The evolutionarily conserved Notch signaling pathway is required for normal vascular development and function, and genetic associations link select Notch receptors and ligands to human clinical syndromes featuring blood vessel abnormalities and stroke susceptibility. A previously described mouse model engineered to suppress canonical Notch signaling in vascular smooth muscle cells (vSMCs) revealed surprising anatomical defects in arterial patterning and vessel maturation, suggesting that vSMCs have the functional capacity to influence blood vessel formation in a Notch signaling-dependent manner. In further analyses using this model system, we now show that explanted aortic ring tissue and Matrigel implants from the smooth muscle Notch signaling-deficient mice yield markedly diminished responses to angiogenic stimuli. Furthermore, cultured Notch signaling-deficient primary vSMCs have reduced proliferation and migration capacities and reveal diminished expression of PDGF receptor β and JAGGED1 ligand. These observations prompted a series of endothelial cell (EC)-vSMC co-culture experiments that revealed a requirement for intact vSMC Notch signals via JAGGED1 for efficient EC Notch1 receptor activation and EC proliferation. Taken together, these studies suggest a heterotypic model wherein Notch signaling in vSMCs provides early instructive cues to neighboring ECs important for optimal postnatal angiogenesis.  相似文献   

12.
The mechanisms underlying regional amyloid beta-protein (Abeta) deposition in brain remain unclear. Here we show that assembly of hereditary variant Dutch- and Italian-type Abetas, and Flemish-type Abeta was accelerated by GM3 ganglioside, and GD3 ganglioside, respectively. Notably, cerebrovascular smooth muscle cells, which compose the cerebral vessel wall at which the Dutch- and Italian-type Abetas deposit, exclusively express GM3 whereas GD3 is upregulated in the co-culture of endothelial cells and astrocytes, which forms the cerebrovascular basement membrane, the site of Flemish-type Abeta deposition. Our results suggest that regional Abeta deposition is induced by the local gangliosides in the brain.  相似文献   

13.
Monoclonal antibodies specific for surface antigens of target cells are supposed to be good vectors for drug transport. It is suggested using monoclonal antibodies that distinguish between smooth muscle and endothelial cells as vectors for directed drug transport to injured (denuded) areas of the blood vessel wall. The following in vitro model was used: monoclonal antibodies were added to cultured vascular smooth muscle or endothelial cells, this was followed by the addition of erythrocytes conjugated with rabbit antimouse antibodies. Spectrometry and scanning electron microscopy were used to assess the results. The erythrocytes, possible containers of drugs, under the experimental conditions were found to bind only to smooth muscle cells. The data obtained suggest that antibody IIG10 discriminating between smooth muscle and endothelial cells provides a specific tool for erythrocyte delivery to smooth muscle cells.  相似文献   

14.
Embryonic data and ultrastructural analyses suggest that the primitive endothelium signals undifferentiated mesenchymal cells to migrate to the forming blood vessel and subsequently regulates mural cell growth and behavior. Upon maturation of the blood vessel, chemotactic and mitogenic signals are apparently diminished and differentiated smooth muscle cells normally remain quiescent. This homeostasis is seemingly upset in conditions which lead to pathologies characterized by smooth muscle cell hyperplasia such as atherosclerosis. By culturing endothelial cells at different densities, we attempted to re-create the various stages of vascular development. Whereas media conditioned by sparse endothelial cells stimulate smooth muscle cells, media conditioned by dense endothelial cell cultures are inhibitory. Culture of sparse smooth muscle cells in media conditioned for 3 days by postconfluent endothelial cell cultures leads to dose-dependent and reversible smooth muscle cell inhibition. Furthermore, in the presence of the endothelial cell-derived inhibitor, smooth muscle cells are rendered refractory to mitogens such as fibroblast growth factor and platelet-derived growth factor. The inhibitory activity is not attributable to the well-characterized inhibitors of smooth muscle cell growth, transforming growth factor type-β, prostaglandin I2, or heparan sulfate proteoglycan. Partial characterization of the inhibitory conditioned media suggests that the active molecule is smaller than 1,000 da, and stable to boiling as well as proteinase K and heparinase digestion. These findings support the concept that there is intercellular communication between endothelial cells and smooth muscle cells and provide evidence for a novel endothelial cell-derived smooth muscle cell growth inhibitor.  相似文献   

15.
The aorta is a magistral artery, which has been traditionally looked upon as a vessel whose properties are invariable throughout its length. However, in the most recent decade, there have been accumulated data that provide evidence that different aorta sections arise from different embryonic origins and that the population of smooth muscle cells making up the vessel’s wall is, consequently, heterogenic. Tracing the fate of smooth muscle cells, the basic components of the vessel, with the aid of genetic marking methods revealed that the cells’ response to various factors is largely determined by the embryonic origin of a certain cell population. However, functional differences between the smooth muscle cells making up different aorta sections remain poorly understood. The aim of the current work was to compare the functional characteristics of the populations of aortic wall smooth muscle cells obtained from the aorta sections differing by their embryonic origin. Towards this end, we obtained smooth muscle cell cultures from the three aorta sections of linear rats, namely, the neural crest derived ascending thoracic aorta, the somites derived descending thoracic aorta, and splanchnic mesoderm derived abdominal aorta. Using immunocytochemistry and Western blotting, the cells from the different regions of aorta were compared on the basis of smooth muscle actin, vimentin, and SM22 content in them. Cell proliferation rate was estimated using the growth curves method. We have demonstrated that the three smooth muscle cell populations arising from different embryonic origins differ in their morphological characteristics as well as by smooth muscle actin and SM22 content. We have shown that smooth muscle cells from the ascending aorta proliferate more actively than the corresponding cells from the descending thoracic aorta. Thus, the functional properties of the populations of rat aortic smooth muscle cells are different and depend on the embryonic origin of the aorta section from which they were obtained.  相似文献   

16.
Glucocorticoid influence on growth of vascular wall cells in culture   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Primary mass cultures and cloned strains of bovine aortic endothelial and smooth muscle cells were investigated with respect to their growth responses to glucocorticoid hormones. The growth of primary endothelial cells was not influenced by glucocorticoid treatment in the absence of fibroblast growth factor (FGF) but was inhibited by about 30% in the presence of FGF; with cloned endothelial cells, glucocorticoids were also growth inhibitory only in the presence of FGF. In contrast, smooth muscle cell growth was inhibited 30%-70% by glucocorticoid treatment in both primary cultures and in the cloned strains in the absence of FGF, and this inhibition was totally abolished by the addition of FGF for both cultures. The corticosteroid influences on cell growth were glucocorticoid specific, concentration dependent, and were observed to be independent of the serum concentration. The results indicate that glucocorticoid hormones have direct and pronounced growth inhibiting effects on aortic smooth muscle cells but only minimal effects on endothelial cells when these components of the vascular wall are analyzed under identical conditions in vitro.  相似文献   

17.
During late gestation, intimal cushions form in the ductus arteriosus (DA) and these cause the vessel to close when it constricts in the postnatal period. The formation of intimal cushions suggests highly specialized functions of DA endothelial and smooth muscle cells. To investigate these properties, we established, from fetal lambs on Day 138 of a 148-day term gestation, primary cell cultures of DA endothelium and smooth muscle and compared them to cells derived from the adjacent pulmonary artery and aorta. Purity of the endothelial cell cultures from each vascular site was assessed by the contact inhibited "cobblestone" monolayer phenotype, by positive immunofluorescence for factor VIII and by angiotensin converting enzyme activity. Purity of smooth muscle cell cultures at each vascular site was assessed by the "hills and valleys" phenotype and by positive immunofluorescence with a smooth muscle actin specific monoclonal antibody. Endothelial and smooth muscle cells had different growth curves, ultrastructural features, and protein profiles on single and two-dimensional SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE), but vascular sites were similar. To further determine whether differences related to DA origin were indeed present, endothelial and smooth muscle cells from all three vascular sites were incubated with the radiolabeled amino acids [14C]leucine, [14C]proline, and [14C]valine and the proteins in both the cells and the conditioned medium were analyzed by autoradiography after SDS-PAGE. A dense band corresponding to a 42-kDa protein was observed in valine-labeled DA endothelial cells and conditioned medium and a 52-kDa protein was observed in the conditioned medium of leucine-labeled DA smooth muscle cells only. Further isolation and characterization of these endothelial and smooth muscle proteins will be necessary to determine whether they are related to the mechanism of intimal cushion formation in the late gestation DA or are present abnormally in association with the intimal proliferation observed in pulmonary and systemic vascular disease.  相似文献   

18.
A novel angiogenesis model using co-culture of endothelial and interstitial cells was developed, in which bovine capillary endothelial cells (BCEC) formed capillary-like structure on the monolayer of interstitial cells (like smooth muscle cells) isolated from rat skeletal muscle. The capillary formation of BCEC occurred even under serum-free conditions. Insulin stimulated the capillary growth under serum-free condition, but not BCEC growth in the single culture system. These results suggested that the insulin effect on the capillary growth was brought about indirectly through the interstitial cells, and that this co-culture system may be useful for the study of angiogenesis (especially in skeletal muscle).  相似文献   

19.
《The Journal of cell biology》1993,123(5):1249-1254
Transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) is secreted in a latent form and activated during co-culture of endothelial cells and smooth muscle cells. Plasmin located on the surface of endothelial cells is required for the activation of latent TGF-beta (LTGF-beta) during co-culture, and the targeting of LTGF-beta to the cellular surface is requisite for its activation. In the present study, the cellular targeting of LTGF- beta was examined. We detected the specific binding of 125I-large LTGF- beta 1 isolated from human platelets to smooth muscle cells but not to endothelial cells. A mAb against the latency-associated peptide (LAP) of large LTGF-beta 1 complex, which blocked the binding of 125I-large LTGF-beta 1 to smooth muscle cells, inhibited the activation of LTGF- beta during co-culture. The binding of 125I-large LTGF-beta 1 could not be competed either by mannose-6-phosphate (300 microM) or by the synthetic peptide Arg-Gly-Asp-Ser (300 micrograms/ml). These results indicate that the targeting of LTGF-beta to smooth muscle cells is required for the activation of LTGF-beta during co-culture of endothelial cells and smooth muscle cells. The targeting of LTGF-beta to smooth muscle cells is mediated by LAP, and the domain of LAP responsible for the targeting to smooth muscle cells may not be related to mannose-6-phosphate or an Arg-Gly-Asp sequence, both of which have been previously proposed as candidates for the cellular binding domains within LAP.  相似文献   

20.
Smooth muscle and endothelial cells in the arterial wall are exposed to mechanical stress. Indeed blood flow induces intraluminal pressure variations and shear stress. An increase in pressure may induce a vessel contraction, a phenomenon known as the myogenic response. Many muscular vessels present vasomotion, i.e., rhythmic diameter oscillations caused by synchronous cytosolic calcium oscillations of the smooth muscle cells. Vasomotion has been shown to be modulated by pressure changes. To get a better understanding of the effect of stress and in particular pressure on vasomotion, we propose a model of a blood vessel describing the calcium dynamics in a coupled population of smooth muscle cells and endothelial cells and the consequent vessel diameter variations. We show that a rise in pressure increases the calcium concentration. This may either induce or abolish vasomotion, or increase its frequency depending on the initial conditions. In our model the myogenic response is less pronounced for large arteries than for small arteries and occurs at higher values of pressure if the wall thickness is increased. Our results are in agreement with experimental observations concerning a broad range of vessels.  相似文献   

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