Abstract
We have recently demonstrated that the blockade of matrix metalloproteinases by local overexpression of the intrinsic inhibitor tissue inhibitor of matrix metalloproteinase-1 (TIMP-1) reduces intimal hyperplasia. We now report a major change in the elastin content of the intima of rat carotid arteries seeded with TIMP-1-overexpression smooth muscle cells. To understand the mechanism responsible for elastin accumulation, synthesis and degradation of elastin in TIMP-1 and control cell-seeded rots were measured. There were no differences in elastin mRNA or elastin systhesis, as documented by 14[C]proline incorporation between TIMP-1 and control cell-seeded arteries. In contrast, there was an increase in cross-linked elastin in the TIMP-1 group. In addition, in TIMP-1 and control rats, an elastase activity of approximately 28 kD was detected by elastin zymography and was decreased in TIMP-1 cell-seeded vessels. The 28 kD elastolytic activity was inhibited by exogenously added TIMP-1 and EDTA but not by PMSF, suggesting that it was a metalloelastase. Therefore, we have demonstrated that a shift of the proteolytic balance toward protease inhibition by TIMP-1 overexpression does not change elastin synthesis but rather changes posttranslational processing, resulting in increased elastin accumulation.
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Forough, R., Lea, H., Starcher, B., Allaire, E., Clowes, M., Hasenstab, D., & Clowes, A. W. (1998). Metalloproteinase blockade by local overexpression of TIMP-1 increases elastin accumulation in rat carotid artery intima. Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology, 18(5), 803–807. https://doi.org/10.1161/01.ATV.18.5.803
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