Owens G K, Thompson M M
J Biol Chem. 1986 Oct 5;261(28):13373-80.
There is an inverse relationship between cellular proliferation and smooth muscle alpha-isoactin expression in cultured vascular smooth muscle cells (SMCs) (Owens, G.K., Loeb, A., Gordon, D., and Thompson, M.M. (1986) J. Cell Biol. 102, 343-352). In the present studies, changes in isoactin expression were studied during developmental growth of rat aortic SMCs (ages 1-180 days) to better understand interrelationships between growth and cytodifferentiation in these cells in vivo. Actin expression (i.e. content and synthesis) was evaluated by one- and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and using isoactin-specific antibodies. The major actin present in cells from newborn rats was nonmuscle beta-actin (56% of total actin), whereas cells from adult animals contained principally smooth muscle alpha-actin (Sm-alpha-actin) (76% of total actin). Increases in Sm-alpha-actin content with increasing age were due, in part, to an increase in Sm-alpha-actin synthesis. However, in SMCs from 90- and 180-day-old rats, the fractional content of Sm-alpha-actin exceeded its fractional synthesis at a time when total Sm-alpha-actin content was increasing. This suggests that Sm-alpha-actin turns over more slowly in mature animals. Decreases in the frequency of SMCs undergoing DNA synthesis with age could not account for increases in Sm-alpha-actin expression with age. However, combined immunocytological and [3H]thymidine autoradiographic studies demonstrated that nearly 50% of the medial derived cells from newborn rat aortas did not show detectable staining with a monoclonal antibody to smooth muscle-specific isoactins, and the replicative frequency was much higher in these cells than in cells that contained Sm-alpha-isoactins. Taken together, the results of the present studies and previous studies in cultured SMCs support the hypothesis that cessation of proliferation during development is associated with the induction of Sm-alpha-actin expression, but that factors other than cellular growth state play an important role in determining the level of Sm-alpha-actin expression in fully differentiated SMCs.
在培养的血管平滑肌细胞(SMC)中,细胞增殖与平滑肌α-异肌动蛋白表达之间存在负相关关系(欧文斯,G.K.,勒布,A.,戈登,D.,和汤普森,M.M.(1986年)《细胞生物学杂志》102卷,343 - 352页)。在本研究中,研究了大鼠主动脉SMC在发育生长过程中(1 - 180天龄)异肌动蛋白表达的变化,以更好地了解这些细胞在体内生长与细胞分化之间的相互关系。通过一维和二维凝胶电泳以及使用异肌动蛋白特异性抗体来评估肌动蛋白的表达(即含量和合成)。新生大鼠细胞中存在的主要肌动蛋白是非肌肉β-肌动蛋白(占总肌动蛋白的56%),而成年动物的细胞主要含有平滑肌α-肌动蛋白(Sm-α-肌动蛋白)(占总肌动蛋白的76%)。随着年龄增长,Sm-α-肌动蛋白含量的增加部分归因于Sm-α-肌动蛋白合成的增加。然而,在90日龄和180日龄大鼠的SMC中,当总Sm-α-肌动蛋白含量增加时,Sm-α-肌动蛋白的分数含量超过了其分数合成。这表明Sm-α-肌动蛋白在成熟动物中的周转更慢。随着年龄增长,进行DNA合成的SMC频率降低并不能解释Sm-α-肌动蛋白表达随年龄的增加。然而,联合免疫细胞化学和[³H]胸腺嘧啶放射自显影研究表明,新生大鼠主动脉中近50%的中膜来源细胞用平滑肌特异性异肌动蛋白单克隆抗体检测不到染色,并且这些细胞中的复制频率远高于含有Sm-α-异肌动蛋白的细胞。综上所述,本研究结果以及先前对培养的SMC的研究支持这样的假设,即发育过程中增殖的停止与Sm-α-肌动蛋白表达的诱导相关,但细胞生长状态以外的因素在决定完全分化的SMC中Sm-α-肌动蛋白表达水平方面起重要作用。