scholarly journals Stromal cells from human long-term marrow cultures are mesenchymal cells that differentiate following a vascular smooth muscle differentiation pathway

Blood ◽  
1993 ◽  
Vol 82 (1) ◽  
pp. 66-76 ◽  
Author(s):  
MC Galmiche ◽  
VE Koteliansky ◽  
J Briere ◽  
P Herve ◽  
P Charbord

In human long-term marrow cultures connective tissue-forming stromal cells are an essential cellular component of the adherent layer where granulomonocytic progenitors are generated from week 2 onward. We have previously found that most stromal cells in confluent cultures were stained by monoclonal antibodies directed against smooth muscle- specific actin isoforms. The present study was carried out to evaluate the time course of alpha-SM-positive stromal cells and to search for other cytoskeletal proteins specific for smooth muscle cells. It was found that the expression of alpha-SM in stromal cells was time dependent. Most of the adherent spindle-shaped, vimentin-positive stromal cells observed during the first 2 weeks of culture were alpha- SM negative. On the contrary, from week 3 to week 7, most interdigitated stromal cells contained stress fibers whose backbone was made of alpha-SM-positive microfilaments. In addition, in confluent cultures, other proteins specific for smooth muscle were detected: metavinculin, h-caldesmon, smooth muscle myosin heavy chains, and calponin. This study confirms the similarity between stromal cells and smooth muscle cells. Moreover, our results reveal that cells in vivo with the phenotype closest to that of stromal cells are immature fetal smooth muscle cells and subendothelial intimal smooth muscle cells; a cell subset with limited development following birth but extensively recruited in atherosclerotic lesions. Stromal cells very probably derive from mesenchymal cells that differentiate along this distinctive vascular smooth muscle cell pathway. In humans, this differentiation seems crucial for the maintenance of granulomonopoiesis. These in vitro studies were completed by examination of trephine bone marrow biopsies from adults without hematologic abnormalities. These studies revealed the presence of alpha-SM-positive cells at diverse locations: vascular smooth muscle cells in the media of arteries and arterioles, pericytes lining capillaries, myoid cells lining sinuses at the abluminal side of endothelial cells or found within the hematopoietic logettes, and endosteal cells lining bone trabeculae. More or less mature cells of the granulocytic series were in intimate contact with the thin cytoplasmic extensions of myoid cells. Myoid cells may be the in vivo counterpart of stromal cells with the above-described vascular smooth muscle phenotype.

2019 ◽  
Vol 68 (2) ◽  
pp. 383-391 ◽  
Author(s):  
Annele Sainio ◽  
Piia Takabe ◽  
Sanna Oikari ◽  
Henriikka Salomäki-Myftari ◽  
Markku Koulu ◽  
...  

Metformin is the first-line drug in the treatment of type 2 diabetes worldwide based on its effectiveness and cardiovascular safety. Currently metformin is increasingly used during pregnancy in women with gestational diabetes mellitus, even if the long-term effects of metformin on offspring are not exactly known. We have previously shown that high glucose concentration increases hyaluronan (HA) production of cultured human vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMC) via stimulating the expression of hyaluronan synthase 2 (HAS2). This offers a potential mechanism whereby hyperglycemia leads to vascular macroangiopathy. In this study, we examined whether gestational metformin use affects HA content in the aortic wall of mouse offspring in vivo. We also examined the effect of metformin on HA synthesis by cultured human VSMCs in vitro. We found that gestational metformin use significantly decreased HA content in the intima-media of mouse offspring aortas. In accordance with this, the synthesis of HA by VSMCs was also significantly decreased in response to treatment with metformin. This decrease in HA synthesis was shown to be due to the reduction of both the expression of HAS2 and the amount of HAS substrates, particularly UDP-N-acetylglucosamine. As shown here, gestational metformin use is capable to program reduced HA content in the vascular wall of the offspring strongly supporting the idea, that metformin possesses long-term vasculoprotective effects.


Blood ◽  
1993 ◽  
Vol 82 (5) ◽  
pp. 1480-1492 ◽  
Author(s):  
H Lerat ◽  
JC Lissitzky ◽  
JW Singer ◽  
A Keating ◽  
P Herve ◽  
...  

Abstract Fibronectin is a major component of the extracellular matrix of adherent layers of human long-term marrow cultures where it may stabilize the extracellular matrix network and provide adhesion sites for primitive hemopoietic cells. This study was devised to analyze the role of adherent cell populations in fibronectin synthesis, matrix assembly, and degradation. In cultures performed under the conditions described by Gartner and Kaplan, immunoprecipitation after metabolic labeling showed that adherent cells synthesized a fibronectin variant comprising the EDa domain and lacking the EDb one. Vascular smooth muscle-like stromal cells were the cell subset responsible for this synthesis. Once synthesized by stromal cells, EDa+fibronectin was secreted into the supernatant and incorporated into the extracellular matrix. The cumulation in the extracellular matrix was predominant by weeks 5 and 6 of culture, when a decrease in the stromal cell intracytoplasmic content of fibronectin was observed. Stromal cells from a transformed cell line, L2Ori-, were also able to synthesize the EDa+fibronectin variant, although for these cells the assembly into the extracellular matrix was partly impaired. Besides stromal cells, other cell types participated in fibronectin synthesis: early-adhering granulomonocytic cells and macrophages appearing later in culture were able to synthesize an EDa-, EDb- fibronectin variant, clearly distinct from the EDa+ variant produced by stromal cells. Studies on cultures in which macrophage growth was stimulated at the expense of stromal cells by adding granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (50 ng/mL) to the culture medium showed a striking decrease in amounts of fibronectin measured in the adherent layer. This decrease was caused by a lack of incorporation of fibronectin in the extracellular matrix, disclosing a major difference between stromal cells and macrophages in terms of matrix assembly. This study confirms the similarity between stromal cells and vascular smooth muscle cells, because in vivo subendothelial intimal aortic smooth muscle cells and cultured smooth muscle cells from the aortic media express the EDa+, EDb- fibronectin variant. Furthermore, our results suggest that the level of fibronectin in adherent layers is regulated by stromal cells and macrophages. The balance between these two cell populations may therefore be crucial for the local control of hemopoiesis by regulating the extracellular fibronectin available for the adhesion of hematopoietic cells. Our data indicate that it may be essential to study the adhesion of stem cells to EDa+, EDb- fibronectin instead of EDa-, EDb- soluble fibronectin, as found in human plasma.


Blood ◽  
1993 ◽  
Vol 82 (5) ◽  
pp. 1480-1492 ◽  
Author(s):  
H Lerat ◽  
JC Lissitzky ◽  
JW Singer ◽  
A Keating ◽  
P Herve ◽  
...  

Fibronectin is a major component of the extracellular matrix of adherent layers of human long-term marrow cultures where it may stabilize the extracellular matrix network and provide adhesion sites for primitive hemopoietic cells. This study was devised to analyze the role of adherent cell populations in fibronectin synthesis, matrix assembly, and degradation. In cultures performed under the conditions described by Gartner and Kaplan, immunoprecipitation after metabolic labeling showed that adherent cells synthesized a fibronectin variant comprising the EDa domain and lacking the EDb one. Vascular smooth muscle-like stromal cells were the cell subset responsible for this synthesis. Once synthesized by stromal cells, EDa+fibronectin was secreted into the supernatant and incorporated into the extracellular matrix. The cumulation in the extracellular matrix was predominant by weeks 5 and 6 of culture, when a decrease in the stromal cell intracytoplasmic content of fibronectin was observed. Stromal cells from a transformed cell line, L2Ori-, were also able to synthesize the EDa+fibronectin variant, although for these cells the assembly into the extracellular matrix was partly impaired. Besides stromal cells, other cell types participated in fibronectin synthesis: early-adhering granulomonocytic cells and macrophages appearing later in culture were able to synthesize an EDa-, EDb- fibronectin variant, clearly distinct from the EDa+ variant produced by stromal cells. Studies on cultures in which macrophage growth was stimulated at the expense of stromal cells by adding granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (50 ng/mL) to the culture medium showed a striking decrease in amounts of fibronectin measured in the adherent layer. This decrease was caused by a lack of incorporation of fibronectin in the extracellular matrix, disclosing a major difference between stromal cells and macrophages in terms of matrix assembly. This study confirms the similarity between stromal cells and vascular smooth muscle cells, because in vivo subendothelial intimal aortic smooth muscle cells and cultured smooth muscle cells from the aortic media express the EDa+, EDb- fibronectin variant. Furthermore, our results suggest that the level of fibronectin in adherent layers is regulated by stromal cells and macrophages. The balance between these two cell populations may therefore be crucial for the local control of hemopoiesis by regulating the extracellular fibronectin available for the adhesion of hematopoietic cells. Our data indicate that it may be essential to study the adhesion of stem cells to EDa+, EDb- fibronectin instead of EDa-, EDb- soluble fibronectin, as found in human plasma.


1994 ◽  
Vol 269 (11) ◽  
pp. 8504-8509
Author(s):  
K.A. Pritchard ◽  
M.K. O'Banion ◽  
J.M. Miano ◽  
N. Vlasic ◽  
U.G. Bhatia ◽  
...  

2005 ◽  
Vol 108 (6) ◽  
pp. 523-530 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giovanna CASTOLDI ◽  
Serena REDAELLI ◽  
Willy M. M. van de GREEF ◽  
Cira R. T. di GIOIA ◽  
Giuseppe BUSCA ◽  
...  

Ang II (angiotensin II) has multiple effects on vascular smooth muscle cells through the modulation of different classes of genes. Using the mRNA differential-display method to investigate gene expression in rat aortic smooth muscle cells in culture in response to 3 h of Ang II stimulation, we observed that Ang II down-regulated the expression of a member of the family of transmembrane receptors for Wnt proteins that was identified as Fzd2 [Fzd (frizzled)-2 receptor]. Fzds are a class of highly conserved genes playing a fundamental role in the developmental processes. In vitro, time course experiments demonstrated that Ang II induced a significant increase (P<0.05) in Fzd2 expression after 30 min, whereas it caused a significant decrease (P<0.05) in Fzd2 expression at 3 h. A similar rapid up-regulation after Ang II stimulation for 30 min was evident for TGFβ1 (transforming growth factor β1; P<0.05). To investigate whether Ang II also modulated Fzd2 expression in vivo, exogenous Ang II was administered to Sprague–Dawley rats (200 ng·kg−1 of body weight·min−1; subcutaneously) for 1 and 4 weeks. Control rats received normal saline. After treatment, systolic blood pressure was significantly higher (P<0.01), whereas plasma renin activity was suppressed (P<0.01) in Ang II- compared with the saline-treated rats. Ang II administration for 1 week did not modify Fzd2 expression in aorta of Ang II-treated rats, whereas Ang II administration for 4 weeks increased Fzd2 mRNA expression (P<0.05) in the tunica media of the aorta, resulting in a positive immunostaining for fibronectin at this time point. In conclusion, our data demonstrate that Ang II modulates Fzd2 expression in aortic smooth muscle cells both in vitro and in vivo.


2015 ◽  
Vol 37 (5) ◽  
pp. 1817-1829 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kai Huang ◽  
Zhi-Qiang Yan ◽  
Dan Zhao ◽  
Si-Guo Chen ◽  
Li-Zhi Gao ◽  
...  

Background/Aims: Physiological mechanical stretch in vivo helps to maintain the quiescent contractile differentiation of vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs), but the underlying mechanisms are still unclear. Here, we investigated the effects of SIRT1 in VSMC differentiation in response to mechanical cyclic stretch. Methods and Results: Rat VSMCs were subjected to 10%-1.25Hz-cyclic stretch in vitro using a FX-4000T system. The data indicated that the expression of contractile markers, including α-actin, calponin and SM22α, was significantly enhanced in VSMCs that were subjected to cyclic stretch compared to the static controls. The expression of SIRT1 and FOXO3a was increased by the stretch, but the expression of FOXO4 was decreased. Decreasing SIRT1 by siRNA transfection attenuated the stretch-induced expression of contractile VSMC markers and FOXO3a. Furthermore, increasing SIRT1 by either treatment with activator resveratrol or transfection with a plasmid to induce overexpression increased the expression of FOXO3a and contractile markers, and decreased the expression of FOXO4 in VSMCs. Similar trends were observed in VSMCs of SIRT1 (+/-) knockout mice. The overexpression of FOXO3a promoted the expression of contractile markers in VSMCs, while the overexpression of FOXO4 demonstrated the opposite effect. Conclusion: Our results indicated that physiological cyclic stretch promotes the contractile differentiation of VSMCs via the SIRT1/FOXO pathways and thus contributes to maintaining vascular homeostasis.


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