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PTEN deficiency promotes pathological vascular remodeling of human coronary arteries
Karen S. Moulton, … , Amrut V. Ambardekar, Mary C.M. Weiser-Evans
Karen S. Moulton, … , Amrut V. Ambardekar, Mary C.M. Weiser-Evans
Published February 22, 2018
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2018;3(4):e97228. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.97228.
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Research Article Vascular biology

PTEN deficiency promotes pathological vascular remodeling of human coronary arteries

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Abstract

Phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN) is an essential regulator of the differentiated vascular smooth muscle cell (SMC) phenotype. Our goal was to establish that PTEN loss promotes SMC dedifferentiation and pathological vascular remodeling in human atherosclerotic coronary arteries and nonatherosclerotic coronary arteries exposed to continuous-flow left ventricular assist devices (CF-LVADs). Arteries were categorized as nonatherosclerotic hyperplasia (NAH), atherosclerotic hyperplasia (AH), or complex plaque (CP). NAH coronary arteries from CF-LVAD patients were compared to NAH coronaries from non-LVAD patients. Intimal PTEN and SMC contractile protein expression was reduced compared with the media in arteries with NAH, AH, or CP. Compared with NAH, PTEN and SMC contractile protein expression was reduced in the media and intima of arteries with AH and CP. NAH arteries from CF-LVAD patients showed marked vascular remodeling and reduced PTEN and α-smooth muscle actin (αSMA) in medial SMCs compared with arteries from non-LVAD patients; this correlated with increased medial collagen deposition. Mechanistically, compared with ApoE–/– mice, SMC-specific PTEN-null/ApoE–/– double-knockout mice exhibited accelerated atherosclerosis progression and increased vascular fibrosis. By microarray and validated quantitative RT-PCR analysis, SMC PTEN deficiency promotes a global upregulation of proinflammatory and profibrotic genes. We propose that PTEN is an antiinflammatory, antifibrotic target that functions to maintain SMC differentiation. SMC loss of PTEN results in pathological vascular remodeling of human arteries.

Authors

Karen S. Moulton, Marcella Li, Keith Strand, Shawna Burgett, Penn McClatchey, Rebecca Tucker, Seth B. Furgeson, Sizhao Lu, Bruce Kirkpatrick, Joseph C. Cleveland, Raphael A. Nemenoff, Amrut V. Ambardekar, Mary C.M. Weiser-Evans

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Figure 1

Interaction of PTEN and serum response factor (SRF) in the nucleus of medial smooth muscle cells (SMCs).

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Interaction of PTEN and serum response factor (SRF) in the nucleus of me...
Proximity ligation assay (PLA) and confocal microscopy were used to detect PTEN-SRF interactions in medial SMCs of human nonatherosclerotic coronary arteries. Representative images shown. (A) Left: PTEN positive control using mouse anti-PTEN primary antibody and anti-mouse PLUS and anti-mouse MINUS PLA probe demonstrates nuclear and cytoplasmic expression of PTEN. Right: SRF positive control using rabbit anti-SRF primary antibody and anti-rabbit PLUS and anti-rabbit MINUS PLA probe demonstrates predominantly nuclear expression of SRF. Scale bar: 20 μm. (B) PLA using mouse anti-PTEN and rabbit anti-SRF primary antibodies and anti-mouse PLUS and anti-rabbit MINUS PLA probe demonstrates PTEN-SRF nuclear interactions in medial SMCs of human nonatherosclerotic hyperplasia coronary arteries, but no interactions in adventitial cells (arrowheads; right panel). M = media; A = adventitia; white dashed line in right panel indicates the external elastic lamina. Scale bars: 50 μm. (C) PLA negative controls for SRF (left) and PTEN (right) demonstrate lack of signal when either primary antibodies are omitted. Scale bars: 50 μm. For all panels: Red = positive PLA; Blue = DAPI for cell nuclei.

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