Abstract

Notch and transforming growth factor-beta (TGFbeta) play pivotal roles during vascular development and the pathogenesis of vascular disease. The interaction of these two pathways is not fully understood. The present study utilized primary human smooth muscle cells (SMC) to examine molecular cross-talk between TGFbeta1 and Notch signaling on contractile gene expression. Activation of Notch signaling using Notch intracellular domain or Jagged1 ligand induced smooth muscle alpha-actin (SM actin), smooth muscle myosin heavy chain, and calponin1, and the expression of Notch downstream effectors hairy-related transcription factors. Similarly, TGFbeta1 treatment of human aortic smooth muscle cells induced SM actin, calponin1, and smooth muscle protein 22-alpha (SM22alpha) in a dose- and time-dependent manner. Hairy-related transcription factor proteins, which antagonize Notch activity, also suppressed the TGFbeta1-induced increase in SMC markers, suggesting a general mechanism of inhibition. We found that Notch and TGFbeta1 cooperatively activate SMC marker transcripts and protein through parallel signaling axes. Although the intracellular domain of Notch4 interacted with phosphoSmad2/3 in SMC, this interaction was not observed with Notch1 or Notch2. However, we found that CBF1 co-immunoprecipitated with phosphoSmad2/3, suggesting a mechanism to link canonical Notch signaling to phosphoSmad activity. Indeed, the combination of Notch activation and TGFbeta1 treatment led to synergistic activation of a TGFbeta-responsive promoter. This increase corresponded to increased levels of phosphoSmad2/3 interaction at Smad consensus binding sites within the SM actin, calponin1, and SM22alpha promoters. Thus, Notch and TGFbeta coordinately induce a molecular and functional contractile phenotype by co-regulation of Smad activity at SMC promoters.

Highlights

  • Members of the transforming growth factor-␤ (TGF␤) family induce smooth muscle cells (SMC) marker gene expression in multiple cell types [13, 14], this has not been characterized in primary human SMC

  • We evaluated endogenous expression of Notch signaling components in primary human aortic SMC (Fig. 1, A and B)

  • Because Jagged1 ligand has been implicated in regulation of SMC differentiation in vitro and in vivo [4, 23], we verified activation of endogenous Notch signaling using Jagged1-Fc to induce a contractile phenotype characterized by induction of SMC markers SM actin, SM22␣, calponin1, and the Notch targets HRT1 and HRT2

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Summary

Introduction

Members of the transforming growth factor-␤ (TGF␤) family induce SMC marker gene expression in multiple cell types [13, 14], this has not been characterized in primary human SMC. Our data support a model by which TGF␤-induced Smad transcriptional activity is synergistically increased by Notch activation via CBF1 interaction with phosphoSmad (pSmad) and increased pSmad binding to target SMC marker promoters.

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