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Hypoxic pulmonary artery fibroblasts trigger proliferation of vascular smooth muscle cells: role of hypoxia-inducible transcription factors.

Authors :
Rose F
Grimminger F
Appel J
Heller M
Pies V
Weissmann N
Fink L
Schmidt S
Krick S
Camenisch G
Gassmann M
Seeger W
Hänze J
Source :
FASEB journal : official publication of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology [FASEB J] 2002 Oct; Vol. 16 (12), pp. 1660-1. Date of Electronic Publication: 2002 Aug 21.
Publication Year :
2002

Abstract

Chronic lung hypoxia causes vascular remodeling with pulmonary artery smooth muscle cell (SMCPA) hyperplasia, resulting in pulmonary hypertension and cor pulmonale. We investigated SMCPA and pulmonary artery adventitial fibroblasts (FBPA) for their proliferative response to hypoxia. Strong SMCPA growth occurred under hypoxic conditions in SMCPA/FBPA co-cultures, but not in SMCPA monocultures. SMCPA growth was fully reproduced by transferring serum-free supernatant from hypoxic cultured FBPA to normoxic SMCPA. Hypoxia-inducible-transcription-factor subtypes (HIF-1alpha, HIF-2alpha, HIF-3alpha) and its dependent target genes, carrying the hypoxia-responsive-element as regulatory component, were strongly activated in both hypoxic FBPA and SMCPA. HIF-transcription-factor decoy technique, employed to FBPA during hypoxic culturing, blocked the mitogenic activity of FBPA conditioned medium on SMCPA. The data suggest that hypoxia-driven gene regulation in pulmonary artery fibroblasts results in a mitogenic stimulus on adjacent pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells, and HIF-transcription-decoy may offer a new therapeutic approach to suppress these events.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1530-6860
Volume :
16
Issue :
12
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
FASEB journal : official publication of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
12207001
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1096/fj.02-0420fje