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Träfflista för sökning "WFRF:(Albinsson Sebastian) srt2:(2003-2004)"

Search: WFRF:(Albinsson Sebastian) > (2003-2004)

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1.
  • Albinsson, Sebastian, et al. (author)
  • Stretch of the vascular wall induces smooth muscle differentiation by promoting actin polymerization
  • 2004
  • In: Journal of Biological Chemistry. - 1083-351X. ; 279:33, s. 34849-34855
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Stretch of the vascular wall by the intraluminal blood pressure stimulates protein synthesis and contributes to the maintenance of the smooth muscle contractile phenotype. The expression of most smooth muscle specific genes has been shown to be regulated by serum response factor and stimulated by increased actin polymerization. Hence we hypothesized that stretch-induced differentiation is promoted by actin polymerization. Intact mouse portal veins were cultured under longitudinal stress and compared with unstretched controls. In unstretched veins the rates of synthesis of several proteins associated with the contractile/cytoskeletal system (alpha-actin, calponin, SM22alpha, tropomyosin, and desmin) were dramatically lower than in stretched veins, whereas other proteins (beta-actin and heat shock proteins) were synthesized at similar rates. The cytoskeletal proteins beta-actin and vimentin were weakly stretch-sensitive. Inhibition of Rho-associated kinase by culture of stretched veins with Y-27632 produced similar but weaker effects compared with the absence of mechanical stress. Induction of actin polymerization by jasplakinolide increased SM22alpha synthesis in unstretched veins to the level in stretched veins. Stretch stimulated Rho activity and phosphorylation of the actin-severing protein cofilin-2, although both effects were slow in onset (Rho-GTP, > 15 min; cofilin-P, > 1 h). Cofilin-2 phosphorylation of stretched veins was inhibited by Y-27632. The F/G-actin ratio after 24 h of culture was significantly greater in stretched than in unstretched veins, as shown by both ultracentrifugation and confocal imaging with phalloidin/DNase I labeling. The results show that stretch of the vascular wall stimulates increased actin polymerization, activating synthesis of smooth muscle-specific proteins. The effect is partially, but probably not completely, mediated via Rho-associated kinase and cofilin downstream of Rho.
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2.
  • Zeidan, Asad, et al. (author)
  • Stretch-induced contractile differentiation of vascular smooth muscle: sensitivity to actin polymerization inhibitors.
  • 2003
  • In: American Journal of Physiology: Cell Physiology. - : American Physiological Society. - 1522-1563 .- 0363-6143. ; 284:6, s. 1387-1396
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Signaling mechanisms for stretch-dependent growth and differentiation of vascular smooth muscle were investigated in mechanically loaded rat portal veins in organ culture. Stretch-dependent protein synthesis was found to depend on endogenous release of angiotensin II. Autoradiography after [35S]methionine incorporation revealed stretch-dependent synthesis of several proteins, of which SM22 and actin were particularly prominent. Inhibition of RhoA activity by cell-permeant C3 toxin increased tissue mechanical compliance and reduced stretch-dependent extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK)1/2 activation, growth, and synthesis of actin and SM22, suggesting a role of the actin cytoskeleton. In contrast, inhibition of Rho-associated kinase by Y-27632 did not reduce ERK1/2 phosphorylation or actin and SM22 synthesis and did not affect tissue mechanical compliance but still inhibited overall growth. The actin polymerization inhibitors latrunculin B and cytochalasin D both inhibited growth and caused increased tissue compliance. Whereas latrunculin B concentration-dependently reduced actin and SM22 synthesis, cytochalasin D did so at low (10-8 M) but not at high (10-6 M) concentration. The results show that stretch stabilizes the contractile smooth muscle phenotype. Stretch-dependent differentiation marker expression requires an intact cytoskeleton for stretch sensing, control of protein expression via the level of unpolymerized G-actin, or both.
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  • Result 1-2 of 2
Type of publication
journal article (2)
Type of content
peer-reviewed (2)
Author/Editor
Albinsson, Sebastian (2)
Hellstrand, Per (2)
Nordström, Ina (2)
Swärd, Karl (1)
Malmqvist, Ulf (1)
Zeidan, Asad (1)
University
Lund University (2)
Language
English (2)
Research subject (UKÄ/SCB)
Medical and Health Sciences (2)

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