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Phosphate Regulation of Vascular Smooth Muscle Cell Calcification

 

作者: Shuichi Jono,   Marc McKee,   Charles Murry,   Atsushi Shioi,   Yoshiki Nishizawa,   Katsuhito Mori,   Hirotoshi Morii,   Cecilia Giachelli,  

 

期刊: Circulation Research: Journal of the American Heart Association  (OVID Available online 2000)
卷期: Volume 87, issue 7  

页码: 10-17

 

ISSN:0009-7330

 

年代: 2000

 

出版商: OVID

 

关键词: vascular calcification;hyperphosphatemia;inorganic phosphate;human smooth muscle cell;sodium-dependent phosphate transport;Pit-1;Cbfa-1

 

数据来源: OVID

 

摘要:

Vascular calcification is a common finding in atherosclerosis and a serious problem in diabetic and uremic patients. Because of the correlation of hyperphosphatemia and vascular calcification, the ability of extracellular inorganic phosphate levels to regulate human aortic smooth muscle cell (HSMC) culture mineralization in vitro was examined. HSMCs cultured in media containing normal physiological levels of inorganic phosphate (1.4 mmol/L) did not mineralize. In contrast, HSMCs cultured in media containing phosphate levels comparable to those seen in hyperphosphatemic individuals (>1.4 mmol/L) showed dose-dependent increases in mineral deposition. Mechanistic studies revealed that elevated phosphate treatment of HSMCs also enhanced the expression of the osteoblastic differentiation markers osteocalcin and Osf2/Cbfa-1. The effects of elevated phosphate on HSMCs were mediated by a sodium-dependent phosphate cotransporter (NPC), as indicated by the ability of the specific NPC inhibitor phosphonoformic acid, to dose dependently inhibit phosphate-induced calcium deposition as well as osteocalcin and Cbfa-1 gene expression. With the use of polymerase chain reaction and Northern blot analyses, the NPC in HSMCs was identified as Pit-1 (Glvr-1), a member of the novel type III NPCs. These data suggest that elevated phosphate may directly stimulate HSMCs to undergo phenotypic changes that predispose to calcification and offer a novel explanation of the phenomenon of vascular calcification under hyperphosphatemic conditions. The full text of this article is available at http://www.circresaha.org.

 



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