Abstract
Although inhibition of neointimal hyperplasia by cell cycle gene blockade therapy results in improved endothelial cell function in experimental vein grafts, little is known either about endothelial healing immediately after vein grafting or about the effect of this therapy on the healing process. Scanning electron microscopy demonstrated an immediate decrease in vein graft endothelial cell density associated with vein graft wall stretch, followed by a return to baseline by postoperative day 3. En face detection of bromodeoxyuridine incorporation confirmed a rapid endothelial proliferation by 48 hours. Despite inhibition of underlying vascular smooth muscle cell proliferation, E2F decoy oligonucleotide did not inhibit either endothelial bromodeoxyuridine incorporation or the return to baseline cell density. This differential response to E2F decoy was also observed in human umbilical vein endothelial cell culture, which resisted the E2F decoy inhibition of cell growth that was observed in human umbilical artery smooth muscle cells, despite evidence for nuclear localized delivery of the oligonucleotide into both cell types. Furthermore, the reduction of E2F binding activity seen in a nuclear gel shift assay of cultured smooth muscle cells was not observed in endothelial cells. These results suggest a burst of graft endothelial cell proliferation that allows a rapid restoration of cell density in the monolayer. Additionally, there is a selective effect of E2F decoy gene therapy on target smooth muscle cells with sparing of this endothelial healing.
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