Litcius/Paper detail

Vascular smooth muscle remodeling in health and disease

Ghassan Bkaily, Nadia Abou Abdallah, Yanick Simon, Ashley Jazzar, Danielle Jacques

2020Canadian Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology37 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In blood vessels, vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) generally exist in two major phenotypes: contractile and non-contractile (synthetic). The contractile phenotype is predominant and includes quiescent or differentiated VSMCs, which function as the regulators of blood vessel diameter and blood flow. According to some literature in the field, contractile VSMCs do not switch to the non-contractile phenotype due to the activation of specific transcription factors that are considered as guardians of the contractile phenotype. However, a vast amount of the literature uses the terms remodeling and phenotype switching of contractile VSMCs interchangeably based mainly on studies dealing with atherosclerosis. The use of the terms remodeling and switching to describe changes in phenotype based on morphological criteria can be confusing. The term remodeling was first used to describe morphological changes in the heart and was soon used to describe phenotype changes of contractile VSMCs based on morphological criteria. The latter were introduced in early studies, and new molecular criteria were later added, including changes in gene expression, which could be irreversible. In this review, we will discuss the different views concerning remodeling and possible switching of contractile VSMCs to a non-contractile phenotype. We conclude that only remodeling of contractile VSMCs may take place upon vascular injury and disease.

Topics & Concepts

PhenotypeVascular smooth muscleVascular remodelling in the embryoBiologyPhenotypic switchingCell biologyContraction (grammar)Internal medicineEndocrinologySmooth muscleGeneMedicineGeneticsCardiac Fibrosis and RemodelingSignaling Pathways in DiseaseAngiogenesis and VEGF in Cancer