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Elastase and matrix metalloproteinase inhibitors induce regression, and tenascin-C antisense prevents progression, of vascular disease
Kyle Northcote Cowan, … , Peter Lloyd Jones, Marlene Rabinovitch
Kyle Northcote Cowan, … , Peter Lloyd Jones, Marlene Rabinovitch
Published January 1, 2000
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2000;105(1):21-34. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI6539.
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Article

Elastase and matrix metalloproteinase inhibitors induce regression, and tenascin-C antisense prevents progression, of vascular disease

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Abstract

Increased expression of the glycoprotein tenascin-C (TN) is associated with progression of clinical and experimental pulmonary hypertension. In cultured smooth muscle cells (SMCs) TN is induced by matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) and amplifies the proliferative response to growth factors. Conversely, suppression of TN leads to SMC apoptosis. We now report that hypertrophied rat pulmonary arteries in organ culture, which progressively thicken in association with cell proliferation and matrix accumulation, can be made to regress by inhibiting either serine elastases or MMPs. This effect is associated with reduced TN, suppression of SMC proliferation, and induction of apoptosis. Selective repression of TN by transfecting pulmonary arteries with antisense/ribozyme constructs also induces SMC apoptosis and arrests progressive vascular thickening but fails to induce regression. This failure is related to concomitant expansion of a SMC population, which produces an alternative cell survival αvβ3 ligand, osteopontin (OPN), in response to pro-proliferative cues provided by a proteolytic environment. OPN rescues MMP inhibitor–induced SMC apoptosis, and αvβ3 blockade induces apoptosis in hypertrophied arteries. Our data suggest that proteinase inhibition is a novel strategy to induce regression of vascular disease because this overcomes the pluripotentiality of SMC-matrix survival interactions and induces coordinated apoptosis and resorption of matrix.

Authors

Kyle Northcote Cowan, Peter Lloyd Jones, Marlene Rabinovitch

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Figure 11

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TN antisense induces upregulation of OPN with proliferating SMCs. The am...
TN antisense induces upregulation of OPN with proliferating SMCs. The amount of OPN, an alternative αvβ3 ligand, deposited within the vessel wall was assessed. Representative photomicrographs illustrate that diffuse staining was observed in the sense control (a), similar to preculture observations (not shown). This was in contrast to abundant, dense focal deposition of OPN with TN antisense (c). The association between OPN and PCNA positivity was evident in antisense (c) and (d) relative to sense PAs (a) and (b). This increase in OPN was selectively exhibited in antisense cultures, because FN, elastin, and collagen, normalized to changes in vessel thickness, were similar [quantified in (e)]. Bars: 25 μm; graph bars: mean + SEM of 4 vessels; *P < 0.05 compared with sense control.

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ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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