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From the Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathobiology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
| Abstract |
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The tetracyclines are potent inhibitors of the MMP enzyme family and have been used to reduce tissue degradation in periodontal disease and arthritis.2 Doxy-cycline, a tetracycline derivative, has been used experimentally to inhibit matrix degradation during abdominal aortic aneurysm formation,3-5 and recent clinical studies have investigated the use of doxycycline to limit MMP activity and aneurysm growth.6-9 Doxycycline is also currently under investigation as a prophylactic treatment for acute coronary syndromes.10,11
We have previously demonstrated the potent inhibitory effects of doxycycline treatment on intimal thickening and inward remodeling in a series of studies using rat and rabbit models of arterial injury. In the balloon-injured rat carotid artery, doxycycline inhibited SMC proliferation and migration, which led to an attenuation of intimal thickening.12 Moreover, CMT-3, a derivative of doxycycline that lacks antibiotic activity but retains anti-MMP activity, also inhibited intimal thickening, demonstrating that these effects were independent of the antibiotic activity of the drug.13 Furthermore, doxycycline attenuated inward remodeling of the rabbit abdominal aorta by preventing the organization of collagen fibers in the vessel wall.14 These results were in accord with previous studies that showed that treatment with doxycycline could inhibit outward vessel remodeling in response to increased blood flow15 and reduce intimal thickening in a vein graft model of stenosis16 and that minocycline inhibits neointimal thickening.17
Despite these promising findings using in vivo models of vascular disease, few studies have addressed the mechanisms of action of doxycycline on vascular SMCs. Tetracyclines inhibit cell proliferation, migration, and synthesis of matrix in several cell types studied in culture.18-20 At present, it is not entirely clear whether some or all of these effects are dependent on the anti-MMP actions of doxycycline. In addition to well-known effects degrading extracellular matrix molecules, recent research shows that MMPs can modulate cell-matrix and cell-cell adhesion by cleaving integrin,21 discoidin domain receptor,22 and cadherin adhesion molecules.23 Therefore inhibition of the MMPs with doxycycline may lead to changes in cell adhesion, motility, and proliferation that could be important in the pathogenesis of arterial occlusive disease. However, the effects of doxycycline on SMC adhesiveness have not been studied.
In the current report, we have examined the mechanisms by which doxycycline inhibits SMC responses to injury, using a series of in vitro assays that mimic critical steps in intimal hyperplasia and inward remodeling. These include SMC adhesion to substrate and focal contact formation, cell-cell adhesion, migration, proliferation, and collagen matrix reorganization. We show that doxycycline treatment leads to dramatically increased SMC adhesion, which in turn might limit SMC responses involved in vascular remodeling.
| Materials and Methods |
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Smooth Muscle Cell Culture
SMCs were isolated from the carotid arteries of male Sprague-Dawley rats (Charles River, Montreal, QC, Canada). Vessels were cleared of adventitia and endothelial cells, and medial SMCs were dispersed by digestion with collagenase and elastase as previously described.24 SMCs were grown in Dulbeccos modified Eagles medium, supplemented with 10% fetal calf serum (FCS) and 2% penicillin-streptomycin in T75 tissue culture flasks. SMCs were used for experiments between passages 4 and 10. In many of our experiments, SMCs were plated on uncoated surfaces to begin; however, the incubation times allowed ample time for synthesis, deposition, and remodeling of an endogenous matrix by the SMCs. To examine morphology, SMCs were incubated with standard medium (10% FCS) for 24 hours, followed by fixation and staining with Dif-Quick Stain Set (Dade Behring, Newark, DE) according to manufacturers directions.
Smooth Muscle Cell Adhesion
To measure adhesion, subconfluent cultures of SMCs were grown for 48 hours in 6-well tissue culture plates in standard culture medium (10% FCS). Cells were then growth-arrested by incubation in 0.5% FCS for 24 hours, after which fresh media containing 0.5% FCS and 0, 10, or 31 µmol/L doxycycline were added, and the cells underwent a second 24-hour incubation period. Growth was then stimulated by the addition of standard culture medium (10% FCS) containing the same concentration of doxycycline as was used in the pretreatment period. The addition of standard medium was designated as time 0 for the assay. Cell adhesion was assayed at time points 0, 2, 4, and 6 days after serum stimulation, when cells were washed with phosphate buffered saline (PBS) and then treated with trypsin (0.05%). Cells released into suspension after trypsinization were counted by hemocytometer. Cells remaining on the plate were rinsed with PBS and fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde for 5 minutes, and the number of adherent cells was quantified by staining with toluidine blue and measuring the absorbance at 595 nm in a spectrophotometer. We have verified that the OD595 nm is proportional to the number of adherent cells. These experiments were repeated four times. The data were analyzed by analysis of variance followed by Holm Sidak test for pairwise comparisons.
An inverted centrifugation adhesion assay was performed to measure cell adhesion after doxycycline treatment. SMCs were seeded on 24-well plates at a density of 1 x 104 cells per well and incubated with standard culture medium (10% FCS) for 16 hours. Cells were then growth-arrested by serum-deprivation (0.5% FCS) for 24 hours, after which cells were incubated in fresh medium (0.5% FCS) supplemented with 0, 10, or 31 µmol/L doxycycline for an additional 24 hours. At the end of the 48-hour preincubation, medium was replaced with standard culture medium (10% FCS) containing the same concentration of doxycycline, and the cultures were incubated for another 72 hours. The plates were washed with PBS to remove nonadherent cells and then inverted and spun in a plate centrifuge at 0, 100, 200, or 400 x g for 5 minutes. Cells remaining on the plate after centrifugation were quantified by fixing and staining with 0.5% toluidine blue as described above. These experiments were performed in triplicate and repeated three times. The data were analyzed by analysis of variance followed by Fishers protected least significant difference (PLSD) for pairwise comparisons.
Interference Reflection Microscopy
Cell contact with the substratum was visualized by interference reflection microscopy (IRM) using a confocal microscope (MRC-600; Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA) with a reflection module as previously described25 and with the following modifications. Smooth muscle cells were plated on poly-L-lysine-coated coverslips, at a density of 50,000 cells per well in 6-well plates, and cultured for 48 hours in standard culture medium (10% FCS). SMCs were then growth-arrested by serum deprivation (0.5% FCS) for 24 hours, after which they received fresh medium (0.5% FCS) supplemented with 0, 31, or 104 µmol/L doxycycline. After an additional 24 hours, cells were stimulated with standard culture medium (10% FCS) containing the same concentration of doxycycline. After an additional 48-hour incubation, SMCs were fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde for 20 minutes and then mounted in PBS:glycerol at 1:1 volume. IRM takes advantage of the interference pattern of monochromatic light reflected at the phase boundaries that exist between the thin layer of culture medium that separates the cell from the glass substratum. The resultant grayscale image demonstrates the relative degree of contact between the cell and the glass substrate. In general, white patches indicate a separation of >100 nm; broad areas of light to dark gray are produced by close contacts, with cell-substratum separations ranging from 70 to 20 nm; and focal contacts appear as discrete black patches with cell-substratum separations of <15 nm.
The formation of close and focal contacts was estimated by tracing each cell and measuring the average gray level in the cell from the IRM images using SIMPLE PCI imaging software (C-Imaging Inc., Mars, PA). On the gray level scale, white is set to a value of 255 and black to a value of 1. The area of focal contacts was measured by setting a threshold for black in the image and measuring the fractional area of the cell that was black using SIMPLE PCI imaging software. At least nine cells were analyzed for each concentration of doxycycline (0, 31, or 104 µmol/L). The data were analyzed by analysis of variance followed by Holm-Sidak test for pairwise comparisons.
Immunofluorescence Staining and Western Blotting
SMCs were plated on glass coverslips in 6-well tissue culture plates at a density of 50,000 cells per well and were grown in standard culture medium (10% FCS). After 72 hours, fresh culture medium supplemented with doxycycline (0, 31, or 104 mmol/L) was added to the cells, which were incubated for another 48 hours. SMCs were fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde for 8 minutes and immunostained with antibodies against paxillin (1:400; BD Biosciences, San Jose, CA) and phosphotyrosine (1:50; Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Santa Cruz, CA). F-actin was labeled with TRITC-phalloidin (1:400). Imaging was performed using a confocal imaging system (Bio-Rad Radiance). The fractional area in each cell that stained positive for paxillin was measured by setting a threshold for positive staining on the image and measuring positively stained areas within the cell using SIMPLE PCI Imaging Software, measuring at least four cells for each concentration of doxycycline (0 or 104 mmol/L). The extent of tyrosine phosphorylation in focal adhesion plaques was measured using similar methods, and at least 12 cells were measured for each condition (0, 31, or 104 mmol/L doxycycline). The data were analyzed by analysis of variance followed by Holm-Sidak test for pairwise comparisons.
Western blots containing cell lysates were probed with antibodies (paxillin, 1:10,000; phosphotyrosine, 1:1,000; and SMC
-actin, 1:500; or ß-actin, 1:5,000) to determine changes in total levels of each protein in the cells. These experiments were repeated twice.
Cell Aggregation Assay
SMC cultures were grown to 80% confluence in T75 tissue culture flasks with standard culture medium (10% FCS). The cells were then pretreated for 24 hours with 0 or 31 µmol/L doxycycline added to the medium. SMCs were trypsinized and suspended in 6-well tissue culture plates precoated with 1% Sea Plaque Agarose (Cambrex Biosciences, Rockland, ME) at a density of 50,000 cells per well. Standard culture medium (10% FCS) ± 31 µmol/L doxycycline was added to each well, and the cultures were incubated at 37°C and shaken at 100 rpm for 4 hours to distinguish cell-cell adhesion from random clustering of cells. Duplicate experiments were performed in the presence of 4 mmol/L ethylenediamine tetraacetic acid (EDTA) to disrupt calcium-dependent cell-cell adhesions. The cells were then fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde, and aggregates were imaged under phase contrast microscopy. Clusters of cells were identified as aggregates if the cell membranes were tightly apposed.
Smooth Muscle Cell Proliferation
Incorporation of methyl-[3H]thymidine (GE Health Care, Baie dUrfe, QC) was measured as an index of cell proliferation. SMCs were plated at a density of 10,000 cells per well in 24-well culture plates. They were allowed to attach for 48 hours in standard culture medium (10% FCS) and then growth-arrested in serum-free medium containing 2% bovine serum albumin for 24 hours, after which they received 0, 31, or 104 µmol/L doxycycline dissolved in the medium for another 24 hours. The medium was then replaced with standard culture medium (10% FCS) containing the same concentration of doxycycline and 2 µCi/ml [3H]thymidine. After 48 hours, cells were washed with PBS and then fixed with 10% trichloroacetic acid for 20 minutes. Precipitates were washed with 10% trichloroacetic acid and 95% ethanol, solubilized with 0.3 mol/L NaOH for 20 minutes, and then neutralized with 0.3 N HCl. [3H] counts were measured in a liquid scintillation counter. Experiments were repeated five times. The data were analyzed by analysis of variance followed by Fischers PLSD.
Smooth Muscle Cell Scrape Wounding Assay
Confluent cultures of SMCs grown in 6-well tissue culture plates were wounded with a P20 pipette tip and incubated in standard culture medium (10% FCS) containing 0, 31, or 104 µmol/L doxycycline. In this type of assay, cells close the wound by migrating and proliferating into the wounded area.26 Measurements of wound width were obtained every 12 hours over a period of 96 hours using Simple PCI Imaging software. Mean values were expressed as percent wound closure at each time point. These experiments were performed in triplicate and repeated four times. Repeated-measures analysis of variance was used to analyze the data, followed by Holm-Sidak test for pairwise comparisons.
Three-Dimensional (3-D) Collagen Gel Contraction Assay
Cell culture in hydrated collagen gels was performed using a solution of type I collagen (Vitrogen 100; Collagen Biomaterials, Mahwah, NJ) as previously described,27,28 with the following modifications. SMCs were trypsinized, counted with a hemocytometer, and resuspended in standard culture medium (10% FCS). Cell suspensions were added to a solution of neutralized type I collagen (1.5 mg/ml type I collagen) at a concentration of 9 x 105 cells/ml before gel polymerization. Aliquots of 0.5 ml (containing 1 x 105 cells and 1.0 mg/ml type I collagen) were added to 24-well tissue culture plates and polymerized for 1 hour at 37°C in a humidified incubator with 5% CO2. To assess the effects of doxycycline on collagen gel contraction, the collagen gels were impregnated with 0, 42, 104, 208, or 416 µmol/L doxycycline before polymerization, and culture medium was supplemented with the same concentration of doxycycline. These higher concentrations of doxycycline were necessary to ensure penetration of doxycycline into the thick three-dimensional gels. The collagen gels were released from the plate using a spatula and by pipetting medium at the gel-dish interface. Released gels were permitted to contract for 72 hours, and digital images were obtained at 12, 24, 48, and 72 hours after release using a Nikon Coolpix digital camera (Nikon, Mississauga, ON, Canada). Measurement of collagen gel diameter at the indicated time points was performed using Simple PCI imaging software. Gels were measured by tracing around the edges of the gel disk using a mouse. Maximum length of the gel was measured using an algorithm that calculates the maximum distance between any two points on the perimeter of the gel. This maximum length was normalized to the maximum breadth, a second line perpendicular to the first and also spanning the entire gel. If the gel was a perfect circle, the ratio of maximum length to maximum breadth would be 1.0, and either measurement would represent the true diameter of the gel. We analyzed only gels with ratios measuring between 1.0 and 1.2 and so used the maximum length measurement to indicate gel diameter. Gel contraction was expressed relative to control gel diameter (no doxycycline treatment) at each time point. All experiments were performed in triplicate and repeated at least three times. Data were analyzed by analysis of variance followed by Fischers PLSD.
Gelatin Zymography
Two-Dimensional (2-D) SMC Monolayer Culture
Type I collagen (Vitrogen 100) at a concentration of 50 mg/ml was used to form a thin layer of collagen on the wells of 24-well plates. SMCs were seeded at a density of 1 x 104 cells/well and incubated for 16 hours with standard culture medium (10% FCS). The medium was replaced with fresh medium containing 0.5% FCS and 0, 42, 104, 208, or 416 µmol/L doxycycline, and the cells were incubated for an additional 24 hours. Conditioned media was collected from the cultures and stored at 80°C (n = 2 for each concentration of collagen used). Aliquots (5 µl per lane) were electrophoresed on nonreducing sodium-dodecyl-sulfate polyacrylamide gels that contained 0.1% gelatin as substrate for the MMP digestion as previously described.29
SMCs Embedded in 3-D Collagen Gels
At 72 hours after release of the 3-D collagen gels, 1-ml samples of conditioned medium were collected from each well (n = 4 for each concentration of doxycycline used) and stored at 80°C. Aliquots of 5 µl were used for analysis by gelatin zymography. Densitometric analysis of the gelatin zymograms was performed using Scion Image (Scion Corporation). Values were normalized to the control sample in each gel and expressed as relative densitometric units.
| Results |
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SMCs treated with doxycycline for 48 hours exhibited a pronounced change in cell morphology compared with untreated cells. Normal SMCs were elongated and spindleor stellateshaped (Figure 1A)
, whereas the doxycycline-treated cells were smaller, rounder, and often flattened (Figure 1B
, circled in red). Control SMCs readily detached from the substratum when treated with trypsin, however, the doxycycline-treated cells were resistant to trypsinization. Quantification of the number of cells released into suspension after trypsinization revealed a marked decrease in the number of cells released in doxycycline-treated cultures (Figure 1C)
. Conversely, a greater number of cells remained attached to the plate in the doxycycline-treated cultures compared with controls (Figure 1D)
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The increased adhesion of SMCs treated with doxycycline was studied further using IRM. This technique uses the interference pattern of monochromatic light reflected from the cell-substrate boundary to approximate the distance between the cell membrane and the glass coverslip at contact sites. Areas of focal contact where there is less than 15 nm of separation between the cell membrane and the substratum are visualized as black patches on the IRM image. Treatment with 31 µmol/L doxycycline (Figure 2B)
resulted in the formation of focal contacts that were larger and appeared to be more numerous than control untreated cells (Figure 2A)
. Focal contacts formed at the end of cell protrusions (arrowheads) and also were distributed over the ventral surface of the cell (arrows). Treatment with 104 µmol/L doxycycline resulted in the formation of a wide, peripheral band of focal contact circling the cell (Figure 2C
, arrows). Measurement of the average gray level in the cell was used to confirm the visual observations, where a decrease in scale value corresponds to more black. The average gray level was significantly lower after treatment with 104 µmol/L doxycycline (Figure 2D)
. The fractional area of the cell that appeared black was also increased significantly after treatment with 104 µmol/L doxycycline (Figure 2E)
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Visualization of focal adhesions and the actin cytoskeleton was performed by immunostaining for paxillin and labeling F-actin with TRITC-phalloidin. In control SMCs, actin was arranged in thick central stress fibers (Figure 3A)
, whereas cells treated with 104 µmol/L doxycycline lacked these stress fibers, and instead, more actin fibers were distributed around the cell periphery in parallel with the cell membrane, and only a few fibers crossed the cell at oblique angles (Figure 3B)
. In control cells, paxillin staining was localized at the ends of the stress fibers, which were located at the edges of cell protrusions (Figure 3A
, arrows). In doxycycline-treated cells, paxillin staining was still evident at the tips of actin filaments; however, because actin filaments were shorter and spread around the cell periphery, paxillin staining was prominent in a ring at the cell periphery (Figure 3B
, arrows). The more spread distribution of paxillin staining in the doxycycline-treated cells led to an increase in the fractional area of the basal cell surface that stained positive for paxillin (14.7 ± 0.4%) compared with controls (8.4 ± 0.6%, P < 0.001). Western blots containing cell lysates were probed with antibodies against paxillin and actin, but there were no changes in the total levels of these proteins (data not shown), confirming that doxycycline affected the subcellular distribution but did not affect protein levels in the cells.
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Doxycycline Promoted Smooth Muscle Cell-Cell Adhesion
In preliminary experiments, we observed that doxycycline-treated SMCs formed large aggregates after removal from the tissue culture plate with trypsin. Based on this observation, the effect of doxycycline on cell-cell adhesion was investigated using a cell suspension assay. Untreated SMCs formed small aggregates containing few cells (Figure 4A)
. After treatment with 31 µmol/L doxycycline, the SMCs formed numerous large three-dimensional aggregates, as indicated by darker regions in the micrograph (Figure 4B)
. Addition of EDTA disrupted the aggregates in both the doxycycline-treated and the control cell suspensions (Figure 4, C and D)
, confirming that cell aggregation was calciumdependent.
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Increases in cell-substrate and cell-cell adhesion may impact on the ability of SMCs to proliferate or migrate. Treatment with 104 µmol/L doxycycline significantly decreased SMC tritiated thymidine incorporation over 48 hours, from 136 ± 14 x 103 cpm in control cells to 58 ± 3 x 103 cpm in treated cells (P < 0.05). To assess the effects of doxycycline on SMC migration and proliferation, scrape wounding of a SMC monolayer was performed. Wound closure in this assay involves both SMC proliferation and migration into the wounded area. Photomicrographs taken 72 hours after wounding show delayed wound closure by SMCs treated with 31 or 104 µmol/L doxycycline, compared with nontreated controls (Figure 5A)
. Measurement of the percent wound closure versus time revealed a significant inhibitory effect of doxycycline treatment between 24 and 96 hours after wounding (Figure 5B)
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SMCs were cultured in 3-D, floating type I collagen gels to assess the effects of doxycycline on gel contraction and matrix reorganization. Doxycycline had a potent dose-dependent inhibitory effect on collagen gel contraction (Figure 6A)
. At 12 hours, doxycycline treatment at concentrations ranging from 42 to 416 µmol/L resulted in significant increases in gel diameter relative to control, indicating inhibition of gel contraction (Figure 6B)
. At later times (24 to 72 hours), gel contraction was inhibited by concentrations of doxycycline ranging from 104 to 416 µmol/L. Maximal inhibition of contraction was observed at 12 hours with 416 µmol/L doxycycline, resulting in a 63% increase in gel diameter relative to control.
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Samples of conditioned medium were collected from cultures and used to assess the effects of doxycycline on MMP activity. Medium from SMC monolayers plated on a thin layer of type I collagen (2-D cultures) was subject to gelatin zymography (Figure 7A)
. In control samples (no doxycycline treatment), three lytic bands were visualized: a 92-kd band corresponding to MMP-9 proenzyme and 63- and 55-kd bands corresponding to the proenzyme and active forms of MMP-2, respectively. After treatment with doxycycline at concentrations of 208 mmol/L or higher, there was a marked decrease in activity of the MMP-9 and -2 bands (Figure 7A)
. This was confirmed for the MMP-2 proenzyme and MMP-2 active by densitometric analysis (Figure 7B)
. Because it was difficult to reliably detect and measure the MMP-9 band by densitometry, it was not included in the analysis. MMP activity was also assessed in conditioned medium from 3-D collagen gel cultures (Figure 7C)
. Treatment with 416 µmol/L doxycycline resulted in decreased MMP activity in the pro-MMP-2 and active MMP-2 bands and also in the pro-MMP-9 band. This was confirmed by densitometric analysis (Figure 7D)
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| Discussion |
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Cell-matrix adhesion complexes signal for cell survival and proliferation, provide traction to migrating SMCs, and transduce intracellular force to the matrix, permitting remodeling of the three-dimensional matrix structure. However, an optimum balance of cell adhesion must be achieved. Too little adhesion and the cells cannot generate the traction needed for forward movement. Too strong an adhesion prevents the cells from releasing from the substratum to translocate or proliferate.32 We found that doxycycline treatment increased SMC attachment to substrate, as evidenced by the round and flattened morphology of the cells, resistance to trypsinization, and resistance to detachment after inverted centrifugation of the plates. We investigated this attachment phenomenon further using interference reflection microscopy and demonstrated that doxycycline-treated SMCs possessed large peripheral focal contacts that were tightly apposed to the substratum. Immunostaining further revealed that these areas contained large mature focal adhesions rich in paxillin and phosphotyrosine. Doxycycline-treated SMCs also adopted a peripheral distribution of actin filament that paralleled the cell membrane. The redistribution of the proteins occurred without any change in total levels of the proteins. This distribution of focal adhesion and cytoskeletal components is characteristic of firmly attached nonmotile cells.33
Doxycycline treatment also caused increased smooth muscle cell-cell adhesion in suspension culture. Cell-cell adhesion is mediated through cadherins, which form calcium-dependent, homophilic interactions between cells. SMCs express several cadherin molecules, including N-, R-, and T-cadherins, and previous studies have implicated these cadherins in modulating SMC migration and proliferation, with both positive and negative effects.23,34-36 Cadherins are linked to the actin cytoskeleton via the catenins and paxillin, and the latter is present in both cell-matrix and cell-cell adhesions,37,38 thus doxycycline might affect the distribution of cytoplasmic proteins in both types of adhesion complexes.
In addition to their well-recognized role in degrading matrix molecules, recent work indicates that MMPs can cleave integrin,21 discoidin domain receptor,22 and cadherin23,39,40 extracellular domains, thereby destabilizing cell-substrate and cell-cell adhesions. The profound effects of doxycycline on cell-matrix and cell-cell adhesion are likely mediated via MMP inhibition, either directly by preventing MMP-mediated shedding of adhesion receptors or indirectly by impairing the clearance of matrix substrates thereby reinforcing cell-matrix contacts. However, the mechanisms of inhibition by doxycycline could be more complex. One study has shown that a chemically modified tetracycline, CMT-8, increased the expression of E-cadherin protein in breast cancer cells.19 Another study has suggested that MMP-9 may mediate disassembly of cadherins by a mechanism not dependent on proteolytic activity.41
Neointimal thickening that occurs in atherosclerosis and restenosis is dependent on the proliferation and migration of SMCs, so we next examined the effects of doxycycline on these parameters. Tritiated thymidine uptake during cell growth (an index of cell proliferation) was reduced after doxycycline treatment. Doxycycline also inhibited wound closure in a scratch wound assay, where closure is a result of both cell migration and proliferation. These in vitro findings are consistent with our previous in vivo studies demonstrating impaired SMC migration from media to intima and decreased SMC proliferation with doxycycline treatment after balloon catheter injury in the rat carotid artery.12,13 They are also consistent with numerous other studies describing the impairment of cell proliferation and migration after tetracycline treatment.17,19,42-46
Remodeling of vessel diameter is another important determinant of lumen loss after balloon angioplasty. The precise mechanisms of remodeling are not known, however, cell contraction, cell translocation in a circumferential direction within the vessel wall, and reorganization of the extracellular matrix with deposition of both fibrin and collagen have all been implicated.47,48 We investigated the mechanisms of inward remodeling using a 3-D collagen gel contraction assay, a model that is often used to study vessel remodeling and contraction.27,49,50 We found that doxycycline significantly inhibited contraction of collagen gels by SMCs. Our results are consistent with previous studies showing that gel contraction by fibroblasts is impaired by tetracyclines51 and with studies showing that treatment with MMP inhibitors prevented inward vessel remodeling in vivo.52-55 In the current study, we show that reductions in MMP-2 and -9 activities were correlated with reduced gel contraction after doxycycline treatment. However, it is important to note two recent studies that argue that collagen gel contraction is not dependent on the proteolytic activity of MMP-9 but is instead due to an interaction between MMP-9 and CD44 receptors on the cell surface.50,56 We cannot exclude the possibility that doxycycline may have effected MMP-9 independent of the inhibition of proteolytic activity, for example by reducing production of MMP-9, and this is an interesting possibility worthy of future study.
In addition, doxycycline may also impact on other mechanisms. Tension in floating collagen gels is dependent on the presence of serum or growth factors sequestered in the matrix, such as platelet-derived growth factor57
and transforming growth factor-ß58
; thus doxycycline may inhibit collagen gel remodeling by preventing the release or activation of growth factors sequestered in the extracellular matrix. Because both SMCs and fibroblasts use
1ß1,
2ß1 and
vß3 integrins to translate intracellular force to the extracellular matrix in 3-D collagen gels,28,59-61
another possibility is that doxycycline acts by reinforcing integrin-mediated cell adhesion, causing an extremely strong attachment, thereby preventing cell movement within the gel and preventing the exertion of tractional forces on matrix fibers. Furthermore, because MMPs have recently been shown to activate big endothelin-1,62
it is possible that doxycycline is inhibiting collagen gel remodeling by attenuating the generation of bioactive endothelin and thereby limiting the amount of contractile force generated by the SMCs. Finally, we cannot rule out the possibility that doxycycline inhibited the proliferation of cells within the collagen gel, therefore limiting the number of cells present and able to contract the gel.
In this study, we have shown that SMCs treated with doxycycline demonstrate an extremely adhesive phenotype, exhibiting increases in both cell-cell and cell-matrix adhesion. Doxycycline inhibited SMC proliferation, migration, and collagen gel remodeling, all important events in the pathogenesis of postangioplasty stenosis. To date, a number of preclinical and clinical studies have demonstrated the safety and efficacy of doxycycline as a treatment for occlusive vascular diseases. Our study provides insight into the effects of doxycycline at a cellular level and demonstrates effects that may extend beyond the prevention of matrix degradation.
| Acknowledgements |
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| Footnotes |
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Supported by the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Ontario grant T5339, a Career Investigator award (to M.P.B.), a doctoral research award from the Heart and Stroke Foundation (to C.F.), and a Canada Graduate Scholarship Masters award from the Canadian Institutes for Health Research (to B.H.). C.F. and B.H. were also supported through a Premiers Research Excellence award (to M.P.B.).
Accepted for publication January 12, 2006.
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1ß1 and
2ß1 integrins. J Cell Biol 1995, 131:1903-1915This article has been cited by other articles:
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