Abstract
Phosphate (Pi) induces differentiation of arterial smooth muscle cells to the osteoblastic phenotype by inducing the type III Na-dependent Pi transporter Pit-1/solute carrier family member 1. This induction can contribute to arterial calcification, but precisely how Pi stress acts on the vascular wall remains unclear. We investigated the role of extracellular Pi in inducing microstructural changes in the arterial wall. Aortae of Pit-1-overexpressing transgenic (TG) rats and their wild-type (WT) littermates were obtained at 8 weeks after birth. The thoracic descending aorta from WT and TG rats was used for the measurement of wall thickness and uniaxial tensile testing. Structural and ultrastructural analyses were performed using light microscopy and transmission electron microscopy. Gene expression of connective tissue components in the aorta was quantified by quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction. Aortic wall thickness in TG rats was the same as that in WT rats. Uniaxial tensile testing showed that the circumferential breaking stress in TG rats was significantly lower than that in WT rats (p<0.05), although the longitudinal breaking stress, breaking strain, and elastic moduli in both directions in TG rats were unchanged. Transmission electron microscopy analysis of the aorta from TG rats showed damaged formation of elastic fibers in the aortic wall. Fibrillin-1 gene expression levels in the aorta were significantly lower in TG rats than in WT rats (p<0.05). Pi overload acting via the arterial wall Pit-1 transporter weakens circumferential strength by causing elastic fiber malformation, probably via decreased fibrillin-1 expression.
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