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From the Department of Surgery and Pathology, the University of Chicago,
and the Hektoen Institute for Medical Research (A.S.), Chicago, Ill.
Methods and ResultsThe right common carotid artery (CCA) was
balloon-injured in 21 New Zealand White male rabbits. Flow was
thereafter preserved (normal flow, n=7), reduced by partial outflow
occlusion (low flow, n=7), or increased by ligation of the left CCA
(high flow, n=7). In 15 other animals (controls without injury), flow
was reduced (n=5), increased (n=5), or preserved (n=5). Mean blood flow
and pressure in the right CCA were measured before and after flow
modulation (day 0) and before the rabbits were killed (day 7). Northern
analysis, gelatin-gel zymography, and fluorometric assays
were performed on day 7 to determine MMP-2 mRNA levels and activity in
relation to flow and intimal thickening. Mean flow was reduced from
21±1 to 7±1 mL/min (P<0.05) by outflow occlusion and
increased to 31±2 mL/min (P<0.05) by ligation of the
contralateral CCA. Blood pressure was not different between the flow
groups. Hemodynamic parameters were similar
for days 0 and 7 after flow modulation. In the injured right CCA, there
was a 186% increase in MMP-2 mRNA with normal flow
(P<0.05), a 366% increase with low flow
(P<0.005), and only a 38% increase with high flow
(P>0.05) compared with the uninjured CCA with normal
flow. In the uninjured CCA, MMP-2 mRNA levels were increased by only
39% and 26% in the low- and high-flow groups, respectively, compared
with normal-flow controls. The zymographic signal and quantitative
fluorescent activity of gelatinase were markedly increased in
both injured and uninjured CCAs subjected to low flow. Intimal
thickening was observed after 1 week only in CCA segments with low flow
and injury.
ConclusionsHemodynamic forces such as low flow
upregulate injury-induced MMP-2 mRNA and appear to be more important in
regulating MMP-2 activity than injury alone. This may facilitate
migration of the smooth muscle cells and subsequent development of
intimal thickening.
MMPs are a family of zinc-dependent enzymes that are able to digest a
wide range of extracellular matrix proteins and work in concert during
development,4 during
atherogenesis,5 and after vascular
injury.6 7 The MMP family includes the
collagenases (MMP-1), which degrade structural types I to
III collagens; the stromelysins (MMP-3), which have a broad substrate
specificity (proteoglycans, laminin, fibronectin); and the type IV
collagenases, also called gelatinases. The latter group
includes 72-kD gelatinase A (MMP-2) and 92-kD gelatinase B (MMP-9),
which degrade type IV collagen (a major component of the
subendothelial basement membrane); gelatin from
degraded collagen; and elastin. There is increasing evidence that
expression and activation of 72-kD and/or 92-kD type IV
collagenase is associated with SMC migration and
proliferation in vitro.8 9 10 In vivo
administration of synthetic MMP inhibitors significantly
reduces neointimal thickening after injury in rat carotid
artery by decreasing SMC migration and
proliferation.7 11
Evidence has also accrued that hemodynamic factors,
namely low flow and shear stress, are associated with the localization
and progression of intimal hyperplasia.12 13 14 The
mechanisms by which these hemodynamic forces may
modulate the SMC proliferative and migratory responses in vivo include
induction of mitogenic cytokines, such as PDGF-B,
or other mediators, such as MMPs. We therefore investigated the
relationship between flow and MMP-2 mRNA level and activity at regions
of experimental arterial injury. Our working hypothesis was
that low-flow conditions favor increased MMP-2 and the subsequent
development of intimal thickening. To test this hypothesis, we
determined MMP-2 mRNA levels and activity in injured and intact New
Zealand White male rabbit carotid arteries subjected to different flow
conditions for 1 week. The arterial segments involved were
also examined for intimal thickening.
Flow Modulation and Hemodynamic Measurements
Mean blood flow was measured with transit time ultrasound (Transonics
Inc) in the right CCA before and after flow modulation. MAP was also
monitored and recorded with a transduced 23-gauge indwelling
catheter before and after flow modulation. The right CCA was harvested
at day 7 immediately after the flow and pressure measurements. In each
of the experimental groups, 4 to 5 cm of the right CCA was prepared for
RNA, enzymatic analysis, and histopathological evaluation.
Zymography
Fluorometric Assay for Quantification of Gelatinase
Activity
Measurement of mRNA for 72-kD Collagenase IV
(MMP-2)
Total RNA Isolation and Northern Blotting
A positive control of MMP-2 transcript (3.1 kb)16
derived from human abdominal aorta aneurysm was used to
standardize the probe.
Densitometric Analysis
Histopathology
Data Analysis
MAP in the right CCA was not different between the low-, high-, or
normal-flow groups before and after flow modulation. At day 7, the MAPs
in each group were maintained at the day 0 levels, showing that despite
significant flow changes, the MAPs did not change from the baseline
values (Figure 2
Gelatinolytic Activity
As expected from the zymogram in Figure 3
MMP-2 mRNA Expression
Overall, MMP-2 mRNA expression was upregulated in the injured
arterial segments compared with uninjured normal-flow
segments, as represented in Figure 5A
Within the injured arterial segments, MMP-2 mRNA was 2-fold
greater with low flow (P<0.05) and less then half with high
flow (P=NS) compared with normal flow.
In uninjured arterial segments, MMP-2 mRNA levels were
increased by 39% in the low-flow (P<0.05) and 26% in the
high-flow (P>0.05) groups compared with normal-flow control
values (Figure 6A
Histopathology
We found that arterial mural injury upregulated MMP-2 gene
expression at 7 days. However, this was significantly enhanced by
low-flow and, conversely, inhibited by relatively high-flow conditions.
Concomitantly, gelatin lysis by 72-kD gelatinase and its
activated form 64-kD gelatinase was remarkably increased in
low-flow conditions compared with control uninjured arteries and
injured arteries with normal- and high-flow conditions. This increase
in gelatinolytic activity was also confirmed by
fluorometric gelatinase activity assay. Intimal thickening was observed
only in those arterial segments subjected to injury and
low-flow conditions.
Other investigators have shown that MMPs are involved in the migration
and proliferation of vascular SMCs in culture and in experimental
arterial injury. In a recent study by Pauly et
al,10 isolated rat VSMCs cultured on a gel of
reconstituted basement membrane proteins secreted an active form of
MMP-2 to degrade complex extracellular matrix proteins. Neutralizing
antisera to MMP-2 inhibited VSMC migration through the basement
membrane barrier, indicating that VSMC migration may be dependent on
MMP-2 activity. Southgate et al8 demonstrated that two
synthetic MMP inhibitors specific to MMP-2 and MMP-9
inhibited proliferation of SMCs from rabbit aortic explants in a
concentration-dependent manner. In the rat carotid artery, there is
constitutive expression of MMP-2 with increased activity between 4 and
14 days after injury, whereas MMP-9 was induced the first day after
injury.3 6 The early migration of SMCs into the
intima was reduced
The role of flow and related shear-mediated forces in modulating these
characteristic MMP responses to in vivo arterial injury has
not been demonstrated previously. Our findings indicate that when
injured arteries are exposed to low- or high-flow conditions, a
differential response in MMP-2 activity and relative mRNA levels is
observed, with upregulation by low flow and downregulation by high
flow. It should be emphasized that the blood pressure
parameters between the three flow groups were similar, thus
controlling for the potential confounding variable of tensile
stress, which has been shown to greatly modify SMC
metabolism.
Another important objective of this investigation was to further
elucidate the independent role of flow on MMP-2 transcription and
activity. Interestingly, increased gelatinase activity was evident and
of similar order of magnitude in low-flow arterial segments
without and with injury. Conversely, MMP-2 mRNA showed a less dramatic
increase in low-flow uninjured tissue compared with the injured group.
This suggests that increased MMP-2 activity is induced by low flow
independent of endothelial and SMC injury.
We have previously demonstrated that two types of intimal hyperplasia
are found in experimental anastomotic regions: suture line intimal
thickening, which represents vascular healing, and
arterial floor intimal thickening, which developed in
regions of flow oscillation and relatively low
shear.12 Increasing flow by creating a distal
arteriovenous fistula markedly reduced anastomotic intimal thickening
in experimental end-to-side polytetrafluoroethylene
anastomoses.19 Low shear stress was also found to
promote intimal hyperplasia and cellular proliferation in vein and
endothelialized prosthetic
grafts20 21 and in injured rat carotid
arteries.22 Varying shear stress also appears to
modulate SMC proliferation in vitro. Sterpetti et
al23 reported that increasing shear stress
inhibits and decreasing shear stress facilitates proliferation of
bovine arterial SMCs. This response was associated with
enhanced PDGF expression.20 21 23 PDGF is a
potent mitogen for SMCs and a stimulator for MMPs. It is secreted not
only by platelets but also by endothelial cells,
SMCs, and macrophages. Because a putative shear
stressresponsive element (GAGACC) has been identified in the
5'-flanking region of the PDGF-B gene,24 low-flow
and shear-induced MMP-2 activity may therefore be related indirectly to
shear-mediated PDGF secretion from SMCs.
Another potential mechanism for flow modulation of MMP-2 is via
platelet activation during injury. Preliminary findings in our
laboratory suggest that platelet activation as measured by
thromboxane B2 levels is greater
after experimental arterial injury with injured arteries
subjected to reduced flow compared with normal and increased flow
conditions. This suggests that platelet adhesion to regions of
injury is enhanced in a low-flow and low-shear environment. Moreover,
activated platelets have recently been found to release
MMP-2, which mediates further platelet
aggregation.25 Activated platelets
release many growth factors, including PDGF, basic fibroblast growth
factor, and transforming growth factor. These factors play an important
role in regulating SMC migration26 27 28 and
proliferation29 30 and may also induce MMP
expression during arterial
injury.4 31 Conversion of MMP latent proenzyme to
its active form by the plasminogen activator
system is also enhanced by growth factors such as PDGF and basic
fibroblast growth factor.32
Thus, in this experimental model, regulation of MMPs by flow may occur
at two levels, transcriptional and activation of the latent proenzyme.
Hemodynamic shear forces induce in vivo MMP-2
transcriptional events that are independent of yet enhanced by injury.
Upregulation of collagenase activity is observed with low
flow and is independent of mural injury. Potential mechanisms for this
relationship include regulation of MMP-2 release from
shear-activated SMCs or platelets or indirectly via
cytokine-mediated pathways.
Received December 2, 1997;
revision received January 27, 1998;
accepted January 28, 1998.
© 1998 American Heart Association, Inc.
Basic Science Reports
Flow Regulation of 72-kD Collagenase IV (MMP-2) After Experimental Arterial Injury
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Abstract
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Methods
Results
Discussion
References
BackgroundMMP-2 plays a key role in
basement membrane degradation and in the migration of proliferating
smooth muscle cells after vascular injury. Because low flow and shear
stress have been related to the localization and progression of intimal
hyperplasia, we hypothesized that flow conditions modulate in vivo
MMP-2 transcription and activity in a model of injury-induced
intimal thickening.
Key Words: hemodynamics metalloproteinases hyperplasia
![]()
Introduction
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Methods
Results
Discussion
References
Intimal hyperplasia
is an arterial mural response known to occur after vascular
intervention and with altered hemodynamics. As such, it
represents a healing or an adaptive reaction designed to
maintain structural integrity of the vessel wall and homeostasis. This
response involves migration and proliferation of the medial SMCs in the
subintimal space.1 2 By necessity, basement
membrane degradation and extracellular matrix remodeling are required
to liberate the SMC from its surrounding
scaffold.3
![]()
Methods
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Methods
Results
Discussion
References
Animal Model
Adult New Zealand White male rabbits, weighing 3.0 to 3.5 kg and
fed normal rabbit chow (n=36), were used for the study.
Anesthesia was induced with injection of ketamine
hydrochloride (40 mg/kg IM) and xylazine (5 mg/kg IM) and was
maintained with 1% halothane via endotracheal intubation. A 2F balloon
catheter was introduced twice via the facial branch of the right CCA
for 10 cm to induce mural endothelial denudation and
the usually associated subjacent medial injury of the entire length of
the right CCA. The balloon was consistently inflated with 0.2
mL of normal saline. Injury was induced in 21 animals. Housing and
handling of animals were in compliance with the Principles of
Laboratory Animal Care and the Guide for the Care and Use of
Laboratory Animals (NIH publication 8023, revised 1985).
After balloon injury, the blood flow in the right CCA was
reduced by ligation of 3 of the 4 terminal internal and external
branches (n=7, low-flow group) or increased by ligation of the
contralateral left CCA (n=7, high-flow group). In another group of
animals with right CCA injury, flow was preserved without
hemodynamic manipulation (n=7, normal-flow group). To
investigate the independent roles of low and high flow,
hemodynamic manipulation was undertaken in 10 other
animals without balloon injury (low flow, n=5 and high flow, n=5). Five
other animals served as sham-operated controls in which neither balloon
injury nor flow modulation was performed (uninjured normal flow).
Collagenase IV (gelatinase) activity in both injured
and uninjured carotid arteries was determined by zymography. Gelatin
(Sigma), 1 mg/mL, was incorporated into 8% SDS-PAGE. Samples were
extracted with chilled glass homogenizers in ice-cold
10-mmol/L sodium phosphate, pH 7.2, containing 150 mmol/L sodium
chloride (PBS) and 1% Triton X-100, 0.1% SDS. Samples were incubated
with 0.75 mmol/L aminophenyl mercuric acetate for 30 minutes at
37°C to activate latent
collagenase,10 then mixed with sample
buffer (lacking mercaptoethanol and modified to contain a final
concentration of 2.5% SDS) and electrophoresed under nonreducing
conditions. After electrophoresis, SDS was eluted from the gel in 2.5%
Triton X-100 for 60 minutes at room temperature. The gel was then
incubated in substrate buffer (50 mmol/L Tris-HCl, pH 8.0,
containing 5 mmol/L CaCl2 and 1
µmol/L ZnCl2) at 37°C for 16 hours. After
staining with Coomassie blue R-250, gelatin-degrading enzymes were
identified by their ability to clear the substrate at their respective
molecular weights.
Gelatinase activity was quantified by a tube assay modified from
the method of Watanabe et al15 with
fluorescence gelatin as the substrate. Porcine gelatin (Sigma),
10 mg/mL, was mixed with a 20-molar excess of FITC (Sigma) in 50
mmol/L phosphate buffer, pH 9.5. The mixture was incubated at room
temperature overnight and then extensively dialyzed against
physiological saline for 2 to 3 days at room
temperature to remove free fluorescence. The
gelatin/fluorescent conjugate was diluted 1:100 (ie, to 100
µg/mL) in 100 mmol/L Tris-HCl, pH 7.4, containing 5 mmol/L
CaCl2. Tissue-extracted protein (50 µg in 100
µL) was admixed with 200 µL of diluted conjugate, and the tubes
were incubated at 37°C for 1 hour. After incubation, 4.0 mL of
distilled water was added to all tubes to stop the reaction (by
dilution), and fluorescence was quantified with excitation and
emission wavelengths of 491 and 519 nm, respectively. Clostridial
collagenase (Sigma) and Tris buffer were used as positive
and negative controls, respectively. The amount of gelatin degraded was
determined by comparison of sample readings against the positive
control, which represented maximal digestion of 20 µg of
gelatin in the assay tube.
cDNA Probe
A 3.1-kb cDNA of human 72-kD collagenase IV (MMP-2)
was obtained from Dr G.L. Goldberg, Washington University School of
Medicine, St Louis, Mo. The cDNA probe was recovered as a 2.0-kb
fragment after digestion of the isolated plasmid with
XbaI/EcoRI/BamHI restriction enzymes.
Probe was labeled with [
-32P]CTP by the
random hexamer priming method (Promega).
All chemicals, including solvents, were of the highest
analytical grade tested for negative RNAse activity and were purchased
from Sigma Chemical Co. Total RNA was isolated from carotid arteries by
homogenization in 4 mol/L guanidinium
thiocyanatecontaining mercaptoethanol and extraction with
phenol/chloroform. The RNA was precipitated at -70°C with
isopropanol and redissolved in distilled water containing 0.1%
diethylpyrocarbonate. After denaturation with formamide and
formaldehyde, 15 µg RNA (as measured at 260 nm) from each sample was
electrophoresed in a 1.1% agarose gel at 120 V for 4 hours.
Equivalency of sample loading was verified by ethidium bromide staining
of the 28S and 18S rRNA bands. After electrophoresis, RNA was
transferred to a nylon filter by capillary blotting for 16 hours and
cross-linked by ultraviolet light. The filter was then prehybridized in
50% formamide, 1 mol/L NaCl, 10 mmol/L
NaH2PO4, 5xDenhardt's
solution, 1% SDS, and 250 µg/mL salmon sperm DNA at 42°C for 4
hours, followed by hybridization in the same buffer with
2x106 cpm/mL of the
32P-labeled probe. Incubation was continued
overnight at 42°C. The filter was washed with 2xsodium chloride
(0.15 mol/L)/sodium citrate (0.015 mol/L) (SSC) and 0.1% SDS three
times for 5 minutes at room temperature, followed by two washes in
1xSSC and 0.1% SDS for 20 minutes at 50°C. The filter was
subsequently exposed to x-ray film at -70°C for 72 hours.
Autoradiographic bands after Northern blotting were
quantified by scanning densitometry (Bio-Rad 620 scanner). To correct
for differences in RNA loading, the density of the 18S ribosomal RNA
band on the photographic negative of the ethidium bromidestained gel
was also determined, and the relative densities of the probe and the
ribosomal RNA band were compared.
The rabbits were killed with an overdose of pentobarbital, and
the carotid arteries were fixed in situ by perfusion with 4%
paraformaldehyde in PBS, pH 7.0, at 100 mm Hg.
The arteries were embedded in paraffin, cross-sectioned at 5-µm
intervals, and stained with hematoxylin-eosin and Gomori's trichrome
aldehyde fuchsin preparation for the connective tissue elements. When
present, intimal thickening was quantified by
oculomicrometry.
Data were compared by ANOVA. A value of P<0.05 was
considered to be significant. Data are expressed as mean±SEM.
![]()
Results
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Methods
Results
Discussion
References
Hemodynamic Parameters
Mean baseline blood flow (21 mL/min) was similar before flow
modulation in all groups and ranged from 19 to 22 mL/min. In the
low-flow animals, outflow ligation reduced baseline flow 3-fold at day
0, to 7±1 mL/min (injured) and 6±1 mL/min (uninjured control)
(P<0.05). In the high-flow animals, ligation of the
contralateral left CCA increased baseline flow by 50% at day 0, to
31±1 mL/min (injured) and 35±2 mL/min (uninjured control)
(P<0.05). In the normal-flow animals, blood flow was
unchanged at day 0 compared with the baseline flow. At day 7 before
death, the blood flow measurements in each group were not different
from the initial values recorded on day 0 (Figure 1
).

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Figure 1. Blood flow measurements in uninjured control
(U-control) and injured groups before and after flow modulation.
Results are presented as mean±SEM (n=5 in U-control and n=7 in
injured group). *P<0.05 vs normal flow (NF) in
U-control and injured group animals. Flow was similar in all six groups
at baseline. After flow modulation, blood flow was markedly reduced in
low-flow (LF) group and significantly increased in high-flow (HF) group
compared with NF group at both time points: day 0 and day 7.
).

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Figure 2. MAP measurements in uninjured control (U-control)
and injured groups before and after flow modulation. Results are
presented as mean±SEM (n=5 in U-control and n=7 in injured
group). No significant differences were observed before and after flow
modulation in all three flow groups.
Zymography of the arterial extracts demonstrated a
consistent band of gelatinolytic activity
at the molecular size of 72 kD, representing gelatinase A
(MMP-2). This was constitutively expressed in uninjured rabbit carotid
arteries and was increased at 7 days after arterial injury
in all experimental groups. Zones of lysis were also observed at
molecular positions of
64, 80, and 90 kD (Figure 3
). The 72-kD MMP-2 and its
activated 64-kD form were greatest in the low-flow group in
both injured and uninjured arteries than in the normal-flow and
high-flow groups. Lesser-intensity bands at 90 and 80 kD appeared only
in the injured low-flow group (not discernible in Figure 3
). These most
likely represent 92-kD collagenase IV (MMP-9) and
its activated forms.8

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Figure 3. Zymographic analyses of gelatinases from
carotid artery extracts in normal-flow (NF), low-flow (LF), and
high-flow (HF) groups from uninjured control (U) and injured (I)
animals. Each result is shown as duplicate lanes. Zymogram shows
increased activity of 72-kD gelatinase and its activated form
(64 kD) in LF uninjured and injured arteries vs NF and HF. Activity was
greater in injured arteries in NF and HF than uninjured arteries.
, quantitative gelatinase
activity (ng gelatin digested · h-1
· mg protein-1) was significantly increased at
1 week in both injured (50±5) and uninjured (48±3) right CCA segments
subjected to low flow compared with the respective injured (29±2) and
uninjured (26±4) segments of normal flow (P<0.05).
Although moderate increases in activity were also noted in high-flow
conditions, 41±4 for uninjured and 35±3 for injured segments, this
was not statistically different from the normal-flow groups (Figure 4
).

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Figure 4. Quantification of gelatinase activity from
uninjured control (U-control) and injured carotid arteries under
different flow conditions after 7 days. Results are presented
as mean±SEM (n=5 in U-control and n=4 in injured group).
*P<0.05 vs normal flow (NF) in U-control and injured
animals, respectively. Gelatinase activity increased
50% in
low-flow (LF) group vs NF group. There was also a moderate increase in
activity in high-flow (HF) group. This was not statistically different
from NF group.
To determine whether flow induced alteration of MMP-2 mRNA, we
performed Northern blot analysis. Rabbit MMP-2 mRNA was
represented by two species of mRNA: 2.8 and 3.5 kb. The
detection of these two transcripts with a human MMP-2 cDNA probe is
consistent with recent work by Matsumoto et
al,17 in which 95% homology was shown between
human and rabbit MMP-2.
. RNA loading conditions in each lane
were assessed with 18S rRNA. Relative mRNA levels for each group were
determined by densitometry using both bands as signals and normalizing
the density to 18S rRNA and were expressed as a percentage increase of
the uninjured normal-flow values (Figure 5B
). There was a 186%
increase in MMP-2 mRNA levels in injured arterial segments
with normal flow (P<0.05) and a 366% increase with low
flow (P<0.005). Conversely, mRNA levels were only slightly
increased (38%) with high flow (P>0.05).

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Figure 5. A, Northern blot analysis for 72-kD
gelatinase (MMP-2) mRNA levels in injured carotid arteries. Each result
is presented in duplicate lanes. Results from uninjured
normal-flow carotid arterial segments (U-NF) are shown for
comparison. NF indicates normal flow; LF, low flow; and HF, high flow.
Ethidium bromide staining of 18S rRNA bands indicates loading
conditions. B, Densitometric analysis of blot. Densities were
compared in each case (n=4) with U-NF bands. MMP-2 mRNA at 3.5 and 2.8
kb was increased in all injured carotid segments (NF, LF, and HF) vs
U-NF. Increase in LF group was greatest (366%,
P<0.005), in NF moderate (186%,
P<0.05), and in HF minimal (38%,
P>0.05). Within injured arterial segments,
MMP-2 mRNA was 2-fold greater with low flow (P<0.05,
) and less than half with high flow (P=NS) vs normal
flow.
and 6B
).

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Figure 6. A, Northern blot analysis for 72-kD
gelatinase (MMP-2) mRNA levels in uninjured carotid arteries. Each
result is presented in duplicate lanes. NF indicates normal
flow; LF, low flow; and HF, high flow. Ethidium bromide staining of 18S
rRNA bands indicates loading conditions. B, Densitometric
analysis of blot. Densities were compared in each case (n=5)
with NF bands. MMP-2 mRNA at 3.5 and 2.8 kb was increased by 39%
(P<0.05) in LF and 26% (P>0.05) in HF,
respectively, vs NF carotid segments.
Histological sections of the right CCA from each
experimental group were examined for intimal thickening. This was
observed only in the injured arteries subjected to low-flow conditions
(n=3). At 1 week, intimal thickening varied between 0.02 and 0.04
mm. The lesion was composed of SMCs overlying the internal elastic
lamina, with no evidence of mural thrombosis (Figure 7
).

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Figure 7. Morphological changes in carotid artery of three
experimental groups on day 7 after injury. Intimal thickening developed
only in low-flow group (A). Lesion was composed of SMCs overlying
internal elastic lamina (IEL) with no evidence of mural thrombosis.
Intimal thickening was not observed in normal-flow (B) or high-flow (C)
group. Adv indicates adventitia.
![]()
Discussion
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Methods
Results
Discussion
References
The findings of this study indicate that
hemodynamic forces may modulate in vivo MMP-2
transcription and activity in the rabbit carotid artery and
substantiate the paradigm that low-flow and shear conditions enhance
intimal thickening through mechanisms that regulate extracellular
matrix degradation. The latter is a critical step if the proliferating
SMCs were to migrate to the subendothelial space. In
this investigation, we examined the independent role of flow and injury
in relation to MMP-2 mRNA levels and its
gelatinolytic activity.
97% when an MMP inhibitor was
administered.3 11 A similar pattern was also
found in the porcine carotid artery after balloon injury. Increased
gene expression of MMP-2 and MMP-9 was found in both intimal and medial
SMCs and around foci of medial necrosis.18
![]()
Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
CCA
=
common carotid artery
MAP
=
mean arterial pressure
MMP
=
matrix metalloproteinase
PDGF
=
platelet-derived growth factor
rRNA
=
ribosomal RNA
SMC
=
smooth muscle cell
VSMC
=
vascular smooth muscle cell
![]()
Acknowledgments
This work was supported by American Heart Association
Grant-in-Aid 1084301-01. The authors would like to thank Xiling Liu,
biostatistician, for the data analysis and James Vosicky for
his excellent assistance in operative and postoperative animal
care.
![]()
Footnotes
Reprint requests to Hisham S. Bassiouny, MD, Department of Surgery, the University of Chicago, 5841 S Maryland Ave, MC 5028, Chicago, IL 60637.
![]()
References
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Methods
Results
Discussion
References
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R. Krams, S. Verheye, L. C.A. van Damme, D. Tempel, B. M. Gourabi, E. Boersma, M. M. Kockx, M. W.M. Knaapen, C. Strijder, G. van Langenhove, et al. In vivo temperature heterogeneity is associated with plaque regions of increased MMP-9 activity Eur. Heart J., October 2, 2005; 26(20): 2200 - 2205. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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J. S. Garanich, M. Pahakis, and J. M. Tarbell Shear stress inhibits smooth muscle cell migration via nitric oxide-mediated downregulation of matrix metalloproteinase-2 activity Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol, May 1, 2005; 288(5): H2244 - H2252. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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B. L. Langille and D. Dajnowiec Cross-Linking Vasomotor Tone and Vascular Remodeling: A Novel Function for Tissue Transglutaminase? Circ. Res., January 7, 2005; 96(1): 9 - 11. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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N. von Offenberg Sweeney, P. M Cummins, Y. A Birney, J. P Cullen, E. M Redmond, and P. A Cahill Cyclic strain-mediated regulation of endothelial matrix metalloproteinase-2 expression and activity Cardiovasc Res, September 1, 2004; 63(4): 625 - 634. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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J. Perree, T. G. van Leeuwen, R. Kerindongo, J. A. E. Spaan, and E. VanBavel Function and Structure of Pressurized and Perfused Porcine Carotid Arteries: Effects of in Vitro Balloon Angioplasty Am. J. Pathol., November 1, 2003; 163(5): 1743 - 1750. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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I. Rivilis, M. Milkiewicz, P. Boyd, J. Goldstein, M. D. Brown, S. Egginton, F. M. Hansen, O. Hudlicka, and T. L. Haas Differential involvement of MMP-2 and VEGF during muscle stretch- versus shear stress-induced angiogenesis Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol, October 1, 2002; 283(4): H1430 - H1438. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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Z. S. Jackson, A. I. Gotlieb, and B. L. Langille Wall Tissue Remodeling Regulates Longitudinal Tension in Arteries Circ. Res., May 3, 2002; 90(8): 918 - 925. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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W.-H. Fan and M. J. Karnovsky Increased MMP-2 Expression in Connective Tissue Growth Factor Over-expression Vascular Smooth Muscle Cells J. Biol. Chem., March 15, 2002; 277(12): 9800 - 9805. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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Z. S. Galis and J. J. Khatri Matrix Metalloproteinases in Vascular Remodeling and Atherogenesis: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly Circ. Res., February 22, 2002; 90(3): 251 - 262. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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T. Nishida, C. Di Mario, M.J. Kern, T.J. Anderson, I. Moussa, R. Bonan, T. Muramatsu, A.C. Jain, J. Suarez de Lezo, S.Y. Cho, et al. Impact of final coronary flow velocity reserve on late outcome following stent implantation Eur. Heart J., February 2, 2002; 23(4): 331 - 340. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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A M Varnava and M J Davies Relation between coronary artery remodelling (compensatory dilatation) and stenosis in human native coronary arteries Heart, August 1, 2001; 86(2): 207 - 211. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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J. J. Wentzel, J. Kloet, I. Andhyiswara, J. A. F. Oomen, J. C. H. Schuurbiers, B. J. G. L. de Smet, M. J. Post, D. de Kleijn, G. Pasterkamp, C. Borst, et al. Shear-Stress and Wall-Stress Regulation of Vascular Remodeling After Balloon Angioplasty : Effect of Matrix Metalloproteinase Inhibition Circulation, July 3, 2001; 104(1): 91 - 96. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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L. J. Feldman, M. Mazighi, A. Scheuble, J.-F. Deux, E. De Benedetti, C. Badier-Commander, E. Brambilla, D. Henin, P. G. Steg, and M.-P. Jacob Differential Expression of Matrix Metalloproteinases After Stent Implantation and Balloon Angioplasty in the Hypercholesterolemic Rabbit Circulation, June 26, 2001; 103(25): 3117 - 3122. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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J. Redondo, M. E. Pacheco, A. M. Manso, M. Salaices, and J. Marin Cell volume and ionic transport systems after cold preservation of coronary endothelial cells Ann. Thorac. Surg., April 1, 2001; 71(4): 1290 - 1295. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M. R. Ward, P. S. Tsao, A. Agrotis, R. J. Dilley, G. L. Jennings, and A. Bobik Low Blood Flow After Angioplasty Augments Mechanisms of Restenosis : Inward Vessel Remodeling, Cell Migration, and Activity of Genes Regulating Migration Arterioscler. Thromb. Vasc. Biol., February 1, 2001; 21(2): 208 - 213. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M. J. Sierevogel, G. Pasterkamp, E. Velema, P. P. T. de Jaegere, B. J. G. L. de Smet, J. H. Verheijen, D. P. V. de Kleijn, and C. Borst Oral Matrix Metalloproteinase Inhibition and Arterial Remodeling After Balloon Dilation : An Intravascular Ultrasound Study in the Pig Circulation, January 16, 2001; 103(2): 302 - 307. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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