Affiliation:
1. From the John P. Robarts Research Institute and London Health Sciences Centre, Department of Medicine (Cardiology), Medical Biophysics, and Biochemistry, University of Western Ontario, London, Canada.
Abstract
Abstract
Fibroblast growth factor-2 (FGF-2) is an established mediator of smooth muscle cell (SMC) proliferation after vascular injury. However, the influence of FGF-2 on collagen fiber remodeling, which may be a prerequisite for vascular SMC accumulation, is not well understood. We determined that FGF-2 almost completely abrogated the formation of immunodetectable type I collagen fibers in the extracellular matrix of cultured human vascular SMCs. This was associated with reduced expression of proα-chains for types I and III collagen, as assessed by Western blot analysis, and a corresponding reduction in collagen synthesis. Densitometry of Northern blots indicated a potent reduction of mRNA encoding proα-chains for types I and III collagen and a minor reduction in mRNA for proα-chains for type V collagen. Interstitial collagenase (MMP-1), which is required for degradation of collagen types I and III, was not expressed by SMCs under basal culture conditions, but expression was induced by FGF-2, with a potent, dose-dependent increase in MMP-1 protein in conditioned medium. Metalloproteinase inhibitors TIMP-1, TIMP-2, and TIMP-3 were expressed by unstimulated SMCs and were differentially regulated by FGF-2. TIMP-1 expression increased modestly, TIMP-2 expression was repressed, and TIMP-3 was relatively unaffected. The net effect on substrate degradation, as assessed by zymography of conditioned media, was induction of MMP-1 lytic activity by FGF-2, with no effect on the activity of MMP-2, MMP-3, or MMP-9. These data indicate that stimulation of human SMCs with FGF-2 establishes a phenotype in which collagen fiber production is repressed and the capacity for fiber degradation activated. This coordinated response may be critical for SMC accumulation during vascular remodeling as well as atherosclerotic plaque destabilization.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Cited by
78 articles.
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