Objective: To determine the role of patched receptor (Ptc)-1 in mediating pulsatile flow-induced changes in vascular smooth muscle cell growth and vascular remodeling.
Approach and results: In vitro, human coronary arterial smooth muscle cells were exposed to normal or pathological low pulsatile flow conditions for 24 hours using a perfused transcapillary flow system. Low pulsatile flow increased vascular smooth muscle cell proliferation when compared with normal flow conditions. Inhibition of Ptc-1 by cyclopamine attenuated low flow-induced increases in Notch expression while concomitantly decreasing human coronary arterial smooth muscle cell growth to that similar under normal flow conditions. In vivo, ligation injury-induced low flow increased vascular smooth muscle cell growth and vascular remodeling, while increasing Ptc-1/Notch expression. Perivascular delivery of Ptc-1 small interfering RNA by pluronic gel inhibited the pathological low flow-induced increases in Ptc-1/Notch expression and markedly reduced the subsequent vascular remodeling.
Conclusions: These results suggest that pathological low flow stimulates smooth muscle cell growth in vitro and vascular remodeling in vivo via Ptc-1 regulation of Notch signaling.
Keywords: Notch; SMC growth; atherosclerosis; patched; restenosis; vascular remodeling.