[HTML][HTML] Defining smooth muscle cells and smooth muscle injury

WM Mahoney, SM Schwartz - The Journal of clinical …, 2005 - Am Soc Clin Investig
WM Mahoney, SM Schwartz
The Journal of clinical investigation, 2005Am Soc Clin Investig
For 3 decades, terms such as synthetic phenotype and contractile phenotype have been
used to imply the existence of a specific mechanism for smooth muscle cell (SMC)
responses to injury. In this issue of the JCI, Hendrix et al. offer a far more precise approach
to examining the mechanisms of SMC responses to injury, focused not on general changes
in phenotype but on effects of injury on a single promoter element, the CArG [CC (A/T) 6GG]
box, in a single gene encoding smooth muscle (SM) α-actin. Since CArG box structures are …
For 3 decades, terms such as synthetic phenotype and contractile phenotype have been used to imply the existence of a specific mechanism for smooth muscle cell (SMC) responses to injury. In this issue of the JCI, Hendrix et al. offer a far more precise approach to examining the mechanisms of SMC responses to injury, focused not on general changes in phenotype but on effects of injury on a single promoter element, the CArG [CC(A/T)6GG] box, in a single gene encoding smooth muscle (SM) α-actin. Since CArG box structures are present in some, but not all, SMC genes, these data suggest that we may be progressing toward establishing a systematic, molecular classification of both SMC subsets and the response of SMCs to different injuries.
The Journal of Clinical Investigation