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Expression of smooth muscle and nonmuscle myosin heavy chains in cultured vascular smooth muscle cells
Authors:A S Rovner  R A Murphy  G K Owens
Abstract:We explored the hypothesis that discrepancies in the literature concerning the nature of myosin expression in cultured smooth muscle cells are due to the appearance of a new form of myosin heavy chain (MHC) in vitro. Previously, we used a very porous sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis system to detect two MHCs in intact smooth muscles (SM1 and SM2) which differ by less than 2% in molecular weight (Rovner, A. S., Thompson, M. M., and Murphy, R. A. (1986) Am. J. Physiol. 250, C861-C870). Myosin-containing homogenates of rat aorta cells in primary culture were electrophoresed on this gel system, and Western blots were performed using smooth muscle-specific and nonmuscle-specific myosin antibodies. Subconfluent, rapidly proliferating cultures contained a form of heavy chain not found in rat aorta cells in vivo (NM) with electrophoretic mobility and antigenicity identical to the single unique heavy chain seen in nonmuscle cells. Moreover, these cultures expressed almost none of the smooth muscle heavy chains. In contrast, postconfluent growth-arrested cultures expressed increased levels of the two smooth muscle heavy chains, along with large amounts of NM. Analysis of cultures pulsed with 35S] methionine indicated that subconfluent cells were synthesizing almost exclusively NM, whereas postconfluent cells synthesized SM1 and SM2 as well as larger amounts of NM. Similar patterns of MHC content and synthesis were found in subconfluent and postconfluent passaged cells. These results show that cultured vascular smooth muscle cells undergo differential expression of smooth muscle- and nonmuscle-specific MHC forms with changes in their growth state, which appear to parallel changes in expression of the smooth muscle and nonmuscle forms of actin (Owens, G. K., Loeb, A., Gordon, D., and Thompson, M. M. (1986) J. Cell Biol. 102, 343-352). The reappearance of the smooth muscle MHCs in postconfluent cells suggests that density-related growth arrest promotes cytodifferentiation, but the continued expression of the nonmuscle MHC form in these smooth muscle cells indicates that other factors are required to induce the fully differentiated state while in culture.
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