The perfect in vitro model to study and assess treatments for atherosclerosis and neointimal hyperplasia does not exists. An extensive body of literature describing effects of laminar shear stress on endothelial cells has contributed to our understanding of the interactions between shear stress and blood vessels. Laminar shear stress is atheroprotective, whereas oscillatory or disturbed shear stress correlates with areas of atherosclerosis and neointimal hyperplasia in vivo. This study describes the orbital shear stress model, its effects on endothelial cell proliferation and apoptosis, and suggests that activation of the intracellular Akt pathway is associated with these differing effects of laminar and orbital shear stress on endothelial cells.
Orbital shear stress directly stimulates SMC proliferation in long-term culture in vitro and is mediated, at least partially, by the ERK1/2 pathway. The ERK1/2 pathway may also mediate the orbital shear-stress-stimulated switch from SMC contractile to synthetic phenotype. These results suggest that shear-stress-stimulated SMC proliferation after vascular injury is mediated by a pathway amenable to pharmacologic manipulation.
Endothelial cells (ECs) are exposed to repetitive cyclic strain (CS) in vivo by the beating heart. The aim of this study was to assess the influence of CS amplitude and/or frequency on EC proliferation and survival and to determine the role of AKT in CS-induced EC proliferation and survival. Cultured bovine aortic ECs were exposed to 10% strain at a frequency of 60 (60 cpm-10%) or 100 (100 cpm-10%) cycles/min or 15.6% strain at a frequency of 60 cycles/min (60 cpm-15.6%). AKT, glycogen synthase kinase (GSK)-3beta, BAD, and cleaved caspase-3 were activated by CS in ECs. Increasing the magnitude or frequency of strain resulted in an earlier phosphorylation of GSK-3beta, although the magnitude of phosphorylation was similar. After CS at 60 cpm-10% for 24 h, the number of nontransfected ECs was significantly increased by 8.5% (P < 0.05). We found that the number of apoptotic ECs was slightly decreased with exposure to CS. ECs transfected with kinase-dead AKT (KA179) as well as plasmids containing a point mutation in the pleckstrin homology domain of AKT (RC25) not only prevented AKT, GSK-3beta, and BAD phosphorylation but also inhibited the CS-induced increase in cell number as well as the CS-induced protection against apoptosis (both P < 0.05). The ratio of 5'-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine-positive cells was increased when ECs transfected with RC25 and KA179 as well as nontransfected ECs and ECs transfected with Lipofectamine 2000 were exposed to CS. We conclude that AKT is important in enhancing the survival of ECs exposed to CS but is not involved in EC proliferation.
One difficulty in the pharmacologic treatment of atherosclerosis or neointimal hyperplasia leading to restenosis is the multiplicity of activated pathways and thus potential treatment targets. This study demonstrates that shear stress, a hemodynamic force that may be a biologically relevant stimulus to induce vascular pathology, stimulates endothelial cells to secrete PDGF-BB and IL-1alpha. Both of these mediators stimulate the SMC ERK1/2 pathway to induce migration, a critical event in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis and neointimal hyperplasia. Therefore, this study suggests a relevant common target pathway in SMC that is amenable to manipulation for clinical treatment.
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