Reversal of GATA-6 Downregulation Promotes Smooth Muscle Differentiation and Inhibits Intimal Hyperplasia in Balloon-Injured Rat Carotid Artery

Author:

Mano Toshiaki1,Luo Zhengyu1,Malendowicz Slawomir L.1,Evans Todd1,Walsh Kenneth1

Affiliation:

1. From the Division of Cardiovascular Research (T.M., Z.L., K.W.), St. Elizabeth’s Medical Center, Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, Mass; the Department of Medicine, Division of Cardiology (S.L.M.), and the Department of Developmental and Molecular Biology (S.L.M., T.E.), Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY.

Abstract

Abstract —The GATA-6 transcription factor is expressed in quiescent vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) in culture, and levels of its transcript are rapidly downregulated on mitogen stimulation. In this study, we demonstrate that the GATA-6 transcript, protein, and DNA-binding activity are downregulated in rat carotid arteries on balloon injury. Downregulation was detected at 1 and 3 days after injury and recovered by 7 days. To assess the role of GATA-6 downregulation in injury-induced vascular lesion formation, adenoviral vectors were used to express wild-type human GATA-6 cDNA (Ad-GATA6) or an inactive mutant cDNA that lacks a portion of the zinc-finger domain (Ad-GATA6ΔZF). Adenovirus-mediated GATA-6 gene transfer to the vessel wall after balloon injury partially restored the levels of GATA-6 protein and DNA-binding activity to before injury levels. The local delivery of Ad-GATA6 but not Ad-GATA6ΔZF inhibited lesion formation by 46% relative to saline control and 50% relative to a control adenovirus that expressed lacZ . Local delivery of Ad-GATA6 also reversed changes in the expression patterns of smooth muscle myosin heavy chain, smooth muscle α-actin, calponin, vinculin, metavinculin, and proliferating cell nuclear antigen that are associated with injury-induced VSMC phenotypic modulation. These data indicate that the injury-induced downregulation of GATA-6 is an essential feature of VSMC phenotypic modulation that contributes to vessel lesion formation.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology

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