Abstract

Locally liberated cytokines and extracellular matrix components influence the proliferation and differentiation of arterial smooth muscle cells (SMC), thus playing a role in the development of the atheromatous plaque. It has been proposed that the response of SMC to these factors is influenced by their own phenotype. We have tested the effects of transforming growth factor-β1 (TGF-β1) and heparin on proliferation and expression of α-smooth muscle (SM) actin, a well-established SMC differentiation marker, by cultured rat SMC obtained front the normal aorta of young or old rats and from the intimal thickening developed 15 days after endothelial denudation in young rats; these SMC are known to express different phenotypic features. Heparin and TGF-β1 reduced serum-induced proliferation in SMC from young and old rats. Heparin increased the expression of α-SM actin protein and mRNA in SMC from young and old rats, while TGF-β1 exerted the opposite action. Moreover, TGF-β1 induced the appearance of an elongated shape in SMC from both young and old rats. In SMC cultured from intimal thickening, heparin induced a reduction of cell proliferation without modifying their characteristic epithelioid shape; TGF-β1 increased the proliferative activity and induced an elongated cell shape as well as a "hills and valleys" growth pattern similar to that observed in control medial SMC; both heparin and TGF-β1 induced an increase of α-SM actin expression. Our results show that TGF-β1 and heparin exert different effects on the same SMC, suggesting that these substances act at least in part independently. They are also compatible with the view that the action of cytokines and of extracellular matrix components depends on the phenotype of target SMC.

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