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Title: Importance of the phenotypic state of vascular smooth muscle cells on the binding and the mitogenic activity of endothelin. Author: Serradeil-Le Gal C, Herbert JM, Garcia C, Boutin M, Maffrand JP. Journal: Peptides; 1991; 12(3):575-9. PubMed ID: 1923935. Abstract: Smooth muscle cells of the rabbit aorta, when grown in vitro, express distinguishable forms of phenotypes (contractile and synthetic). On contractile cells, ET-1 specifically bound to a single class of high affinity (KD = 128 pM) and high capacity (Bmax = 66,000 sites/cell) binding sites. But, whereas affinity of [125I]-ET-1 was not significantly affected by phenotypic modulation, synthetic cells displayed a 10-fold lower [125I]-ET-1 binding capacity than contractile smooth muscle cells. Similarly, the mitogenic effect of ET-1 on smooth muscle cells was considerably lower for synthetic than for contractile cells. The ET-1 receptor on primary cells was recognized by sarafotoxin S6b and the different ET-related peptides with an order of potency [ET-1 greater than S6b greater than ET-3 greater than Big ET-1 much greater than ET(16-21)] identical to that inducing smooth muscle cell growth. Therefore, these data indicate that the binding and the mitogenic effects of ET-1 on smooth muscle cells might be of different magnitudes depending on the phenotypic state of these cells.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]