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Department of Histology and Medical Embryology and Centro Acidi Nucleici (E.B.), Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche, La Sapienza University, 00161 Rome, Italy
Address all correspondence and requests for reprints to: Dr. Fioretta Palombi, Department of Histology and Medical Embryology, Via A. Scarpa 14; 00161 Rome, Italy. E-mail: fioretta.palombi{at}uniroma1.it
The tunica propria of seminiferous tubules contains a particular type
of smooth muscle cell (myoid cells) arranged in a contractile
epithelioid layer that is responsible for sperm and tubular fluid flow.
Unlike other types of smooth muscle (SM) cells, highly purified
populations of peritubular smooth muscle cells (PSMC) survive and
maintain their contractile phenotype in primary cultures in controlled
conditions. We used this culture model to investigate the response of
the SM contractile phenotype to prolonged exposure to
platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF), one of the main factors
involved in vascular SM pathologies. We observed that 4-day continuous
exposure of PSMC to PDGF-BB at nanomolar concentrations in plain medium
enhances contractile phenotype traits and induces cell hypertrophy
without inducing proliferation. In Northern and Western blotting
experiments, SM-
-actin transcript and protein were found to be
markedly increased in the PDGF-BB-treated samples, which is in line
with the formation of conspicuous SM-
-actin-containing stress
fibers. Moreover, binding sites for endothelin-1 were increased, and
the calcium response to the contractile agonist, determined in single
fura-2-loaded cells, was enhanced. In response to PDGF-BB, the cells
underwent immediate, transient contraction, as seen in a scanning
electron microscope, followed by a gradual increase in size, as
evaluated by cytofluorometry, and enhancement of protein synthesis. The
observed pattern of response to PDGF-BB was not accompanied by cell
proliferation, as assessed by [3H]thymidine incorporation
and direct cell counts. Unlike other SM cell types, in which
proliferation and loss of contractile traits are induced by PDGF,
chronic treatment of PSMC with this growth factor results in
hypertrophy rather than hyperplasia.
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