131 research outputs found
Endogenous laminin is required for human airway smooth muscle cell maturation
BACKGROUND: Airway smooth muscle (ASM) contraction underlies acute bronchospasm in asthma. ASM cells can switch between a synthetic-proliferative phenotype and a contractile phenotype. While the effects of extracellular matrix (ECM) components on modulation of ASM cells to a synthetic phenotype have been reported, the role of ECM components on maturation of ASM cells to a contractile phenotype in adult lung is unclear. As both changes in ECM components and accumulation of contractile ASM are features of airway wall remodelling in asthma, we examined the role of the ECM protein, laminin, in the maturation of contractile phenotype in human ASM cells. METHODS: Human ASM cells were made senescence-resistant by stable expression of human telomerase reverse transcriptase. Maturation to a contractile phenotype was induced by 7-day serum deprivation, as assessed by immunoblotting for desmin and calponin. The role of laminin on ASM maturation was investigated by comparing the effects of exogenous laminin coated on culture plates, and of soluble laminin peptide competitors. Endogenous expression of laminin chains during ASM maturation was also measured. RESULTS: Myocyte binding to endogenously expressed laminin was required for ASM phenotype maturation, as laminin competing peptides (YIGSR or GRGDSP) significantly reduced desmin and calponin protein accumulation that otherwise occurs with prolonged serum deprivation. Coating of plastic cell culture dishes with different purified laminin preparations was not sufficient to further promote accumulation of desmin or calponin during 7-day serum deprivation. Expression of α2, β1 and γ1 laminin chains by ASM cells was specifically up-regulated during myocyte maturation, suggesting a key role for laminin-2 in the development of the contractile phenotype. CONCLUSION: While earlier reports suggest exogenously applied laminin slows the spontaneous modulation of ASM to a synthetic phenotype, we show for the first time that endogenously expressed laminin is required for ASM maturation to the contractile phenotype. As endogenously expressed laminin chains α2, β1 and γ1 are uniquely increased during myocyte maturation, these laminin chains may be key in this process. Thus, human ASM maturation appears to involve regulated endogenous expression of a select set of laminin chains that are essential for accumulation of contractile phenotype myocytes
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In vitro quantification of melanoma tumor cell invasion.
In order to quantify the invasiveness of melanoma tumor cells in vitro, a modification of the amniotic basement membrane (BM) model, described by Liotta et al. (Cancer Letters, 11, 141, 1980), was used in combination with radiolabeled tumor cells. B16-F10 metastatic murine melanoma cells and a derived clone (B16-F10L) were prelabeled with 0.1 muCi/ml of [14C]thymidine for 20-24 h in serum-free medium at 37 degrees C. Following incubation, fetal bovine serum was added to a concentration of 5 per cent, and the cells were allowed to grow to confluency for the next 24-28 h. The labeled cells were seeded onto amniotic membranes situated in Membrane Invasion Culture System (MICS) chambers at a density of 2.5 X 10(4) per well. At various times points, radioactivity of tumor cells that completely traversed the membrane was determined using an under-the-membrane sampling method. The average percent invasion demonstrated by the B16-F10 line was 2.75 per cent, and 3.65 per cent exhibited by the B16-F10L cell line after 48-53 h in vitro. Since it was apparent that some variability in thickness existed among membrane samples, a morphological analysis was performed on five sectors of a three-inch-diameter sample from four different placentae. Differences and similarities in BM thickness within the same sector were noted by this technique and could possibly contribute to some variability observed in tumor cell invasion in this model. Another parameter examined was the proliferation of tumor cells in the upper and lower wells of the MICS chambers. By 48 h, approximately 32.1 per cent of the B16-F10 cell line as well as the clone had replicated in the upper wells associated with the BMs compared with a 32.9 per cent replication in the lower wells, which reaffirmed the viability of the tumor cells under experimental conditions and insured similarly replicating populations of cells. In order to quantify the invasiveness of radiolabeled tumor cells accurately through a biological membranous barrier, the proper concentration of cells must be used, tumor cell heterogeneity should be taken into consideration, the technique of sampling radiolabeled invasive cells should be critically analysed, and thickness of the membranous barrier should all be considered as possible important factors in the quantitative analyses
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In vitro quantification of melanoma tumor cell invasion.
In order to quantify the invasiveness of melanoma tumor cells in vitro, a modification of the amniotic basement membrane (BM) model, described by Liotta et al. (Cancer Letters, 11, 141, 1980), was used in combination with radiolabeled tumor cells. B16-F10 metastatic murine melanoma cells and a derived clone (B16-F10L) were prelabeled with 0.1 muCi/ml of [14C]thymidine for 20-24 h in serum-free medium at 37 degrees C. Following incubation, fetal bovine serum was added to a concentration of 5 per cent, and the cells were allowed to grow to confluency for the next 24-28 h. The labeled cells were seeded onto amniotic membranes situated in Membrane Invasion Culture System (MICS) chambers at a density of 2.5 X 10(4) per well. At various times points, radioactivity of tumor cells that completely traversed the membrane was determined using an under-the-membrane sampling method. The average percent invasion demonstrated by the B16-F10 line was 2.75 per cent, and 3.65 per cent exhibited by the B16-F10L cell line after 48-53 h in vitro. Since it was apparent that some variability in thickness existed among membrane samples, a morphological analysis was performed on five sectors of a three-inch-diameter sample from four different placentae. Differences and similarities in BM thickness within the same sector were noted by this technique and could possibly contribute to some variability observed in tumor cell invasion in this model. Another parameter examined was the proliferation of tumor cells in the upper and lower wells of the MICS chambers. By 48 h, approximately 32.1 per cent of the B16-F10 cell line as well as the clone had replicated in the upper wells associated with the BMs compared with a 32.9 per cent replication in the lower wells, which reaffirmed the viability of the tumor cells under experimental conditions and insured similarly replicating populations of cells. In order to quantify the invasiveness of radiolabeled tumor cells accurately through a biological membranous barrier, the proper concentration of cells must be used, tumor cell heterogeneity should be taken into consideration, the technique of sampling radiolabeled invasive cells should be critically analysed, and thickness of the membranous barrier should all be considered as possible important factors in the quantitative analyses
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