Cigarette smoke modulates vascular smooth muscle phenotype: implications for carotid and cerebrovascular disease.

Abstract

Background

The role of smooth muscle cell (SMC) phenotypic modulation in the cerebral circulation and pathogenesis of stroke has not been determined. Cigarette smoke is a major risk factor for atherosclerosis, but potential mechanisms are unclear, and its role in SMC phenotypic modulation has not been established.

Methods and results

In cultured cerebral vascular SMCs, exposure to cigarette smoke extract (CSE) resulted in decreased promoter activity and mRNA expression of key SMC contractile genes (SM-α-actin, SM-22α, SM-MHC) and the transcription factor myocardin in a dose-dependent manner. CSE also induced pro-inflammatory/matrix remodeling genes (MCP-1, MMPs, TNF-α, IL-1β, NF-κB). CSE increased expression of KLF4, a known regulator of SMC differentiation, and siKLF4 inhibited CSE induced suppression of SMC contractile genes and myocardin and activation of inflammatory genes. These mechanisms were confirmed in vivo following exposure of rat carotid arteries to CSE. Chromatin immune-precipitation assays in vivo and in vitro demonstrated that CSE promotes epigenetic changes with binding of KLF4 to the promoter regions of myocardin and SMC marker genes and alterations in promoter acetylation and methylation.

Conclusion

CSE exposure results in phenotypic modulation of cerebral SMC through myocardin and KLF4 dependent mechanisms. These results provides a mechanism by which cigarette smoke induces a pro-inflammatory/matrix remodeling phenotype in SMC and an important pathway for cigarette smoke to contribute to atherosclerosis and stroke.

Department

Description

Provenance

Citation

Published Version (Please cite this version)

10.1371/journal.pone.0071954

Publication Info

Starke, Robert M, Muhammad S Ali, Pascal M Jabbour, Stavropoula I Tjoumakaris, Fernando Gonzalez, David M Hasan, Robert H Rosenwasser, Gary K Owens, et al. (2013). Cigarette smoke modulates vascular smooth muscle phenotype: implications for carotid and cerebrovascular disease. PloS one, 8(8). p. e71954. 10.1371/journal.pone.0071954 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/31645.

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Scholars@Duke

Hasan

David Hasan

Professor of Neurosurgery

Dr. Hasan is a scientist neurosurgeon with extensive experience in management of cerebrovascular diseases and skull base tumors.   He is a fellowship - dual trained open cerebrovascular and endovascular with a background of treating over 2500 brain aneurysms using very innovative techniques including awake surgery. 

He is an international authority in cerebrovascular research with over 270 peer-reviewed PubMed publications, multiple NIH grants, and member of several editorial boards of high impact medical and surgical journals.    


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