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Soluble guanylate cyclase alpha(1) and beta(1) gene transfer increases NO responsiveness and reduces neointima formation after balloon injury in rats via antiproliferative and antimigratory effects (2001)

Abstract
In vascular smooth muscle cells, NO stimulates the synthesis of cGMP by soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC), a heterodimer composed of alpha(1) and beta(1) subunits. NO/cGMP signal transduction affects multiple cell functions that contribute to neointima formation after vascular injury. Balloon-induced vascular injury was found to decrease sGC subunit expression and enzyme activity in rat carotid arteries. The effect of restoring sGC enzyme activity on neointima formation was investigated using recombinant adenoviruses specifying sGC alpha(1) and beta(1) subunits (Adalpha1 and Adbeta1). Coinfection of cultured rat aortic smooth muscle cells with Adalpha1 and Adbeta1 increased NO-stimulated intracellular cGMP levels 60-fold and decreased DNA synthesis and migration by 16% and 48%, respectively. Immunoreactivity for alpha(1) and beta(1) subunits colocalized in carotid arteries infected with Adalpha1 and Adbeta1. Molsidomine-stimulated carotid tissue cGMP levels were greater after coinfection with Adalpha1 and Adbeta1 than after infection with a control virus, AdRR5 (0.53+/-0.09 pmol/mg protein, mean+/-SEM, versus 0.23+/-0.09, P. Center for Transgene Technology and Gene Therapy, Flanders Interuniversity Institute for Biotechnology, University Hospital Gasthuisberg, Belgium.

Publication details
Download http://circres.ahajournals.org/cgi/pmidlookup?view=long&pmid=11139481
http://gateway.newisiknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcAuth=CCC&SrcApp=PRODUCT_NAME&SrcURL=WOS_RETURN_URL&CKEY=SINN0103010088CP&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=CCC&SrcDesc=RETURN_ALT_TEXT&SrcAppSID=APP_SID
Publisher Lippincott williams & wilkins
Repository Lirias is a research document repository at KULeuven (Belgium)
Keywords Angioplasty, Balloon, Animals, Carotid Arteries, Carotid Artery Injuries, Cell Division, Cell Movement, Cells, Cultured, Cyclic GMP, Gene Transfer Techniques, Guanylate Cyclase, Molsidomine, Muscle, Smooth, Vascular, Nitric Oxide, Nitric Oxide Donors, Rats, Solubility, Tunica Intima, cyclic gmp, soluble guanylate cyclase, nitric oxide, adenovirus, gene therapy, smooth-muscle cells, nitric-oxide synthase, dependent protein-kinase, carotid-artery, in-vivo, intimal hyperplasia, angiotensin-ii, expression, proliferation, cgmp
Type Description (Metadata) only, IT, article
Language English
Relation Circulation research vol:88 issue:1 pages:103-109