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From the Physiological Laboratory, Cambridge, England.
Correspondence to Dr J. Brown, Physiological Laboratory, Downing St, Cambridge, CB2 3EG, England.
Abstract In vitro evidence suggests that natriuretic peptide receptors (NPR)-B and NPR-C inhibit vascular smooth muscle (VSM) proliferation. NPR-B is guanylate cyclase-coupled and selectively activated by C-type natriuretic peptide (CNP)-(1-22). NPR-C is not guanylate cyclase-coupled and, unlike NPR-B, avidly binds atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP)-(1-28) as well as CNP-(1-22). Here, we investigate these receptors during the VSM proliferation and neointimal formation found 5, 7, and 20 days after compressing the central ear artery of the rabbit. Receptors were mapped autoradiographically using [125I-Tyr0]CNP-(1-22), which binds NPR-B and NPR-C, and 125I-ANP-(1-28), which binds NPR-C and NPR-A, another guanylate cyclase-coupled receptor. Normal tunica media had NPR-Blike binding sites, and the level of these did not change significantly after compression. Consistent with this, CNP-(1-22) stimulated cGMP production equally with membranes from normal or damaged arteries and was more effective than ANP-(1-28). Neointima, which became evident 5 to 7 days after arterial damage, expressed NPR-Clike sites and no detectable NPR-Blike binding. NPR-Clike sites also appeared on the media for the first time between 5 and 7 days after compression. Immunohistochemistry for proliferating cell nuclear antigen revealed widespread mitosis in VSM at 5 days after compression, but mitosis was virtually restricted to the neointima at and beyond 7 days after compression. Thus, whereas levels of NPR-B did not change significantly after arterial injury and NPR-A was not detected, NPR-Clike receptors were unregulated as mitosis declined in the media and as a prominent neointima formed.
Key Words: natriuretic peptides receptors neointima
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