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Original Contribution |
From the Wihuri Research Institute, Helsinki, Finland.
AbstractMast cells are
present in the human arterial intima. To study whether
mast-cell degranulation influences the rate of proliferation of smooth
muscle cells, we cocultured sensitized (IgE-bearing) rat serosal mast
cells and rat aortic smooth muscle cells (SMCs). When sensitized mast
cells were stimulated to degranulate with antigen, the rate of
proliferation of the cocultured SMCs decreased sharply. This
inhibitory effect was found to be due mainly to the very
high molecular weight (Mr) heparin
proteoglycans (average Mr 750 000) released
from the stimulated mast cells. When the heparin proteoglycans were
purified from mast-cell granule remnants and added to the SMC culture,
they were found to block the cell cycle at the G0
S
transition and the exit from the G2/M phase, their
inhibitory effect resembling that of commercial heparin.
However, in contrast to the reported dependence of the
inhibitory effect of commercial heparin on the release of
transforming growth factor-ß from serum, the inhibitory
effect of the mast cellderived heparin proteoglycans in the presence
of serum was not transforming growth factor-ß dependent. Moreover,
the effect of the mast cellderived heparin proteoglycans was more
efficient than that of commercial heparins of high (average
Mr 15 000) and low (average
Mr 5000) molecular weight. We also purified
heparin glycosaminoglycans (average
Mr 75 000) from the mast cellderived
heparin proteoglycans and found that they also inhibited SMC growth
efficiently, although less strongly than their parent heparin
proteoglycans. These results reveal, for the first time, that mast
cells are able to regulate SMC growth. Thus, activated mast
cells, by releasing heparin proteoglycans, possibly participate in the
regulation of SMC growth in the human arterial intima, the
site of atherogenesis.
Key Words: atherosclerosis heparin proteoglycan mast cell proliferation smooth muscle cell
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