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Publication : Protease-activated receptor-2 modulates protease-activated receptor-1-driven neointimal hyperplasia.

First Author  Sevigny LM Year  2011
Journal  Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol Volume  31
Issue  12 Pages  e100-6
PubMed ID  21940952 Mgi Jnum  J:191453
Mgi Id  MGI:5461777 Doi  10.1161/ATVBAHA.111.238261
Citation  Sevigny LM, et al. (2011) Protease-activated receptor-2 modulates protease-activated receptor-1-driven neointimal hyperplasia. Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol 31(12):e100-6
abstractText  OBJECTIVE: Emerging evidence suggests that protease-activated receptors-1 and -2 (PAR1 and PAR2) can signal together in response to proteases found in the rapidly changing microenvironment of damaged blood vessels. However, it is unknown whether PAR1 and PAR2 promote or mitigate the hyperplastic response to arterial injury. Using cell-penetrating PAR1 pepducins and mice deficient in PAR1 or PAR2, we set out to determine the respective contributions of the receptors to hyperplasia and phenotypic modulation of smooth muscle cells (SMCs) in response to arterial injury. METHODS AND RESULTS: SMCs were strongly activated by PAR1 stimulation, as evidenced by increased mitogenesis, mitochondrial activity, and calcium mobilization. The effects of chronic PAR1 stimulation following vascular injury were studied by performing carotid artery ligations in mice treated with the PAR1 agonist pepducin, P1pal-13. Histological analysis revealed that PAR1 stimulation caused striking hyperplasia, which was ablated in PAR1(-/-) and, surprisingly, PAR2(-/-) mice. P1pal-13 treatment yielded an expression pattern consistent with a dedifferentiated phenotype in carotid artery SMCs. Detection of PAR1-PAR2 complexes provided an explanation for the hyperplastic effects of the PAR1 agonist requiring the presence of both receptors. CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that PAR2 regulates the PAR1 hyperplastic response to arterial injury leading to stenosis.
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