Abstract

Previous studies from this laboratory have demonstrated that angiotensin II (Ang II) and arginine vasopressin (AVP) are potent hypertrophic agents in cultured rat aortic smooth muscle cells. The present study identified major proteins that accumulate in Ang II-induced and AVP-induced hypertrophic cells and initiated studies of the mechanisms that contribute to their accumulation. Smooth muscle cell hypertrophy induced by Ang II and/or AVP (1 microM each) was associated with widespread increases in the content of many cellular proteins that were resolved by one- and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. However, increases were also selective in nature, with increases in certain individual proteins, including actin (twofold to threefold), vimentin (2.5-fold to sevenfold), tropomyosin (threefold to sixfold), and myosin heavy chain, far exceeding overall increases in cellular protein content (20-40%). Increases in actin content were due largely to increased expression of smooth muscle alpha-actin (3.6- to 7.5-fold), as opposed to nonmuscle beta-actin (1.7- to 2.5-fold). Increases in smooth muscle alpha-actin were accompanied by a fivefold to eightfold increases in smooth muscle alpha-actin mRNA, indicating that these changes were not due exclusively to translational controls. Results demonstrate that contractile agonist-induced hypertrophy in cultured smooth muscle cells is due, in part, to increased expression of smooth muscle contractile proteins. Furthermore, the fact that Ang II and AVP induced selective increases in smooth muscle alpha-actin suggests that these agonists may not only regulate growth of vascular smooth muscle but may also promote expression of smooth muscle-specific contractile proteins during differentiation of vascular smooth muscle.

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