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  4. Smooth muscle Notch1 mediates neointimal formation after vascular injury
 
research article

Smooth muscle Notch1 mediates neointimal formation after vascular injury

Li, Y.
•
Takeshita, K.
•
Liu, P.Y.
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2009
Circulation

Notch1 regulates binary cell fate determination and is critical for angiogenesis and cardiovascular development. However, the pathophysiological role of Notch1 in the postnatal period is not known. We hypothesize that Notch1 signaling in vascular smooth muscle cells (SMCs) may contribute to neointimal formation after vascular injury. METHODS AND RESULTS: We performed carotid artery ligation in wild-type, control (SMC-specific Cre recombinase transgenic [smCre-Tg]), general Notch1 heterozygous deficient (N1+/-), SMC-specific Notch1 heterozygous deficient (smN1+/-), and general Notch3 homozygous deficient (N3-/-) mice. Compared with wild-type or control mice, N1+/- and smN1+/- mice showed a 70% decrease in neointimal formation after carotid artery ligation. However, neointimal formation was similar between wild-type and N3-/- mice. Indeed, SMCs derived from explanted aortas of either N1(+/-)- or smN1+/- mice showed decreased chemotaxis and proliferation and increased apoptosis compared with control or N3-/- mice. This correlated with decreased staining of proliferating cell nuclear antigen-positive cells and increased staining of cleaved caspase-3 in the intima of N1(+/-)- or smN1+/- mice. In SMCs derived from CHF1/Hey2-/- mice, activation of Notch signaling did not lead to increased SMC proliferation or migration. CONCLUSIONS: These findings indicate that Notch1, rather than Notch3, mediates SMC proliferation and neointimal formation after vascular injury through CHF1/Hey2 and suggest that therapies that target Notch1/CHF1/Hey2 in SMCs may be beneficial in preventing vascular proliferative diseases.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.108.790485
Web of Science ID

WOS:000266403200008

Author(s)
Li, Y.
Takeshita, K.
Liu, P.Y.
Satoh, M.
Oyama, N.
Mukai, Y.
Chin, M.T.
Krebs, L.
Kotlikoff, M.I.
Radtke, F.  
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Date Issued

2009

Published in
Circulation
Volume

119

Issue

20

Start page

2686

End page

2692

Subjects

molecular biology

•

remodeling

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signal transduction

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Protein-Kinase Akt

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Signaling Pathway

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Growth-Factor

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In-Vitro

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Cells

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Mice

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Proliferation

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Migration

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Angiogenesis

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Hyperplasia

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
UPRAD  
Available on Infoscience
September 22, 2009
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/42775
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