Vascular Smooth Muscle and Arterial Calcification
Overview
Authors
Affiliations
Smooth muscle cultures can calcify under certain circumstances. As a model system these cultures therefore provide information on why calcification occurs in atherosclerotic plaques. Whether all smooth muscle cells (under certain conditions), or only specific populations, can produce this mineralization has not been resolved. Demer's group has cloned calcifying vascular cells from subcultured bovine aorta and studied them in detail. They have speculated on whether the cells are smooth muscle which have altered in phenotype, or whether they are derived from a stem cell population within the artery wall. The article argues that while the normal process of smooth muscle phenotypic modulation seen in arterial repair could account for the observations, this view may be two simplistic considering the complex nature of the artery wall. Certainly there is evidence for heterogeneity of smooth muscle cells in the artery wall and recent evidence suggests that stem cells can circulate in the blood and repopulate tissues. Further studies are required to resolve the important question as to the origin of cells which produce mineralization in atheroma.
Inflammation in Fibrodysplasia Ossificans Progressiva and Other Forms of Heterotopic Ossification.
Matsuo K, Chavez R, Barruet E, Hsiao E Curr Osteoporos Rep. 2019; 17(6):387-394.
PMID: 31721068 PMC: 7271746. DOI: 10.1007/s11914-019-00541-x.
Vascular calcification: pathobiology of a multifaceted disease.
Demer L, Tintut Y Circulation. 2008; 117(22):2938-48.
PMID: 18519861 PMC: 4431628. DOI: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.107.743161.
Arterial calcification in diabetes.
Chen N, Moe S Curr Diab Rep. 2003; 3(1):28-32.
PMID: 12643143 DOI: 10.1007/s11892-003-0049-2.
Cholesterol in vascular and valvular calcification.
Demer L Circulation. 2001; 104(16):1881-3.
PMID: 11602487