Adult human arterial smooth muscle cells in primary culture Modulation from contractile to synthetic phenotype

J Thyberg, J Nilsson, L Palmberg, M Sjölund - Cell and tissue research, 1985 - Springer
J Thyberg, J Nilsson, L Palmberg, M Sjölund
Cell and tissue research, 1985Springer
Smooth muscle cells were isolated enzymatically from adult human arteries, grown in
primary culture in medium containing 10% whole blood serum, and studied by transmission
electron microscopy and [3 H] thymidine autoradiography. In the intact arterial wall and
directly after isolation, each smooth muscle cell had a nucleus with a wide peripheral zone
of condensed chromatin and a cytoplasm dominated by myofilament bundles with
associated dense bodies. After 1–2 days of culture, the cells had attached to the substrate …
Summary
Smooth muscle cells were isolated enzymatically from adult human arteries, grown in primary culture in medium containing 10% whole blood serum, and studied by transmission electron microscopy and [3H]thymidine autoradiography. In the intact arterial wall and directly after isolation, each smooth muscle cell had a nucleus with a wide peripheral zone of condensed chromatin and a cytoplasm dominated by myofilament bundles with associated dense bodies. After 1–2 days of culture, the cells had attached to the substrate and started to spread out. At the same time, a characteristic fine-structural modification took place. It included nuclear enlargement, dispersion of the chromatin and formation of large nucleoli. Moreover, myofilament bundles disappeared and an extensive rough endoplasmic reticulum and a large Golgi complex were organized in the cytoplasm. This morphological transformation of the cells was completed in 3–4 days. It was accompanied by initiation of DNA replication and mitosis.
The observations demonstrate that adult human arterial smooth muscle cells, when cultivated in vitro, pass through a phenotypic modulation of the same type as arterial smooth muscle cells from experimental animals. This modulation gives the cells morphological and functional properties resembling those of the modified smooth muscle cells found in fibroproliferative lesions of atherosclerosis. Further studies of the regulation of smooth muscle phenotype and growth may provide important clues for a better understanding of the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis.
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