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Epithelial Cells Induce a Cyclo‐Oxygenase‐1‐Dependent Endogenous Reduction in Airway Smooth Muscle Contractile Phenotype

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&NA; Airway smooth muscle cells (ASMCs) are phenotypically regulated to exist in either a proliferative or a contractile state. However, the influence of other airway structural cell types on ASMC… Click to show full abstract

&NA; Airway smooth muscle cells (ASMCs) are phenotypically regulated to exist in either a proliferative or a contractile state. However, the influence of other airway structural cell types on ASMC phenotype is largely unknown. Although epithelial cells are known to drive ASM proliferation, their effects on the contractile phenotype are uncertain. In the current study, we tested the hypothesis that epithelial cells reduce the contractile phenotype of ASMCs. To do so, we measured force production by traction microscopy, gene and protein expression, as well as calcium release by Fura‐2 ratiometric imaging. ASMCs incubated with epithelial‐derived medium produced less force after histamine stimulation. We observed reduced expression of myocardin, &agr;‐smooth muscle actin, and calponin within ASMCs after coculture with epithelial cells. Peak calcium release in response to histamine was diminished, and depended on the synthesis of cyclo‐oxygenase‐1 products by ASM and on prostaglandin E receptors 2 and 4. Together, these in vitro results demonstrate that epithelial cells have the capacity to coordinately reduce ASM contraction by functional antagonism and by reduction of the expression of certain contractile proteins.

Keywords: phenotype; epithelial cells; smooth muscle; contractile phenotype

Journal Title: American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology
Year Published: 2017

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