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TGF-ß stimulates biglycan core protein synthesis but not glycosaminoglycan chain elongation via Akt phosphorylation in vascular smooth muscle

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posted on 2024-11-23, 07:59 authored by Narin DerrickNarin Derrick, Afework Getachew, Micah Burch, Graeme Lancaster, Rikang Wang, Haitau Wang, Wenhua Zheng, Peter Little AMPeter Little AM
Transforming growth factor-b (TGF-b) can mediate proteoglycan synthesis via Smad and non-Smad signalling pathways in vascular smooth muscle (VSM). We investigated whether TGF-b-mediated proteoglycan synthesis is via PI3K/Akt. TGF-b induced a rapid phosphorylation of Akt that continued upto 4 h. Akt phosphorylation was blocked by Akt1/2 inhibitor SN30978; however, it did not block Smad2 phosphorylation at either the carboxy or linker regions indicating that TGF-bmediated Akt phosphorylation is independent of Smad2 signalling. The role of Akt in TGF-b-mediated proteoglycan synthesis was investigated. Treatment with SN30978 showed a concentration-dependent decrease in TGF-b-mediated [35S]- sulphate and [35S]-Met/Cys incorporation into secreted proteoglycans; however, SDS-PAGE showed no change in biglycan size. In TGF-b-treated cells, biglycan mRNA levels increased by 40-100% in 24 h and was significantly blocked by SN30978. Our findings demonstrate that Akt is a downstream signalling component of TGF-b-mediated biglycan core protein synthesis but not glycosaminoglycan chain hyper-elongation in VSM.

History

Journal

Growth Factors

Volume

29

Issue

5

Start page

203

End page

210

Total pages

8

Publisher

Informa Healthcare

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2011 Informa UK, Ltd

Former Identifier

2006028638

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2014-03-21

Open access

  • Yes

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