Publication | Open Access
Stem Cell Factor Deficiency Is Vasculoprotective
79
Citations
36
References
2006
Year
VasculitisImmunologyPathologyRegenerative MedicineAngiogenesisBone Marrow FailureBone Morphogenic ProteinBone MarrowVascular InjuryStem CellsCell TransplantationCell SignalingMechanobiologyAutoimmune DiseaseVascular BiologyScf ExpressionCell BiologyMesenchymal Stem CellStem Cell ResearchTransplant ArteriopathyMedicine
Evidence suggests that bone marrow (BM) cells may give rise to a significant proportion of smooth muscle cells (SMCs) that contribute to intimal hyperplasia after vascular injury; however, the molecular pathways involved and the timeline of these events remain poorly characterized. We hypothesized that the stem cell factor (SCF)/c-Kit tyrosine kinase signaling pathway is critical to neointimal formation by BM-derived progenitors. Wire-induced femoral artery injury in mice reconstituted with wild-type BM cells expressing yellow fluorescent protein was performed, which revealed that 66+/-12% of the SMCs (alpha-smooth muscle actin-positive [alphaSMA(+)] cells) in the neointima were from BM. To characterize the role of the SCF/c-Kit pathway, we used c-Kit deficient W/W(v) and SCF-deficient Steel-Dickie mice. Strikingly, vascular injury in these mice resulted in almost a complete inhibition of neointimal formation, whereas wild-type BM reconstitution of c-Kit mutant mice led to neointimal formation in a similar fashion as wild-type animals, as did chronic administration of SCF in matrix metalloproteinase-9-deficient mice, a model of soluble SCF deficiency. Pharmacological antagonism of the SCF/c-Kit pathway with imatinib mesylate (Gleevec) or ACK2 (c-Kit antibody) also resulted in a marked reduction in intimal hyperplasia. Vascular injury resulted in the local upregulation of SCF expression. c-Kit(+) progenitor cells (PCs) homed to the injured vascular wall and differentiated into alphaSMA(+) cells. Vascular injury also caused an increase in circulating SCF levels which promoted CD34(+) PC mobilization, a response that was blunted in mutant and imatinib mesylate-treated mice. In vitro, SCF promoted adhesion of BM PCs to fibronectin. Additionally, anti-SCF antibodies inhibited adhesion of BM PCs to activated SMCs and diminished SMC differentiation. These data indicate that SCF/c-Kit signaling plays a pivotal role in the development of neointima by BM-derived PCs and that the inhibition of this pathway may serve as a novel therapeutic target to limit aberrant vascular remodeling.
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