生存素
纤维连接蛋白
细胞外基质
血管平滑肌
细胞生物学
下调和上调
细胞内
赖氨酰氧化酶
化学
细胞凋亡
细胞外
新生内膜
生物
内科学
医学
内分泌学
再狭窄
生物化学
平滑肌
基因
支架
作者
Amanda Krajnik,Erik Nimmer,Andra Sullivan,Joseph A. Brazzo,Yuna Heo,Alanna Krug,John Kolega,Su‐Jin Heo,Kwonmoo Lee,Brian R. Weil,Deok‐Ho Kim,Yongho Bae
标识
DOI:10.1101/2022.10.24.513582
摘要
ABSTRACT Vascular dysfunction is a common cause of cardiovascular diseases characterized by the narrowing and stiffening of arteries, such as atherosclerosis, restenosis, and hypertension. Arterial narrowing results from the aberrant proliferation of vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) and their increased synthesis and deposition of extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins. These, in turn, are modulated by arterial stiffness, but the mechanism for this is not fully understood. We found that survivin (an inhibitor of apoptosis) is an important regulator of stiffness-mediated ECM synthesis and intracellular stiffness in VSMCs. Whole-transcriptome analysis and cell culture experiments showed that survivin expression is upregulated in injured femoral arteries in mice and in human VSMCs cultured on stiff fibronectin-coated hydrogels. Suppressed expression of survivin in human VSMCs and mouse embryonic fibroblasts decreased the stiffness-mediated expression of ECM components implicated in arterial stiffness, namely, collagen-I, fibronectin, and lysyl oxidase. By contrast, expression of these proteins was upregulated by the overexpression of survivin in human VSMCs cultured on soft hydrogels. Atomic force microscopy analysis showed that suppressed or enhanced expression of survivin decreases or increases intracellular stiffness, respectively. These findings suggest a novel mechanism by which survivin modulates arterial stiffness.
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