Abstract
We examined the relationship between growth arrest of smooth muscle cells and structural changes in microfilament bundles, and also that between the structural changes and the actions of contractile agonist using a multipassagable variant cell line (SM-3) derived from rabbit aortic smooth muscle cells. The content of smooth muscle type α-actin increased with density-dependent growth arrest of the SM-3 cells, but was attenuated in the logarithmically growing cultures. As assessed cytochemically, the growth-arrested cells contained longitudinally oriented bundles of actin-containing microfilament and myosin-based filaments visualized with rhodamine-phalloidin and antibody against myosin light chain 20, respectively, whereas both actin- and myosin-containing structures in logarithmically growing cells showed slight, shortened, or diffused patterns. Electron microscopic examination of the growth-arrested cells revealed that the cells contained numerous and conspicuous microfilament bundles associated with many compact electron-dense bodies. In addition, pinocytotic vesicles were often found near the plasma membrane in the growth-arrested cells. SM-3 cells in the growth-arrested phase responded to prostaglandin F2α (3–30μM) and rat endothelin (0.1–1.0 μM) with a reversible contractile response, in association with monophosphorylation and/or diphosphorylation of the myosin light chain 20. However, the influence of the contractile agonists was greatly reduced during logarithmic growth. These results suggest that in the SM-3 cells in the growth-arrested phase, there is a restoration of the contractile architecture and the myosin light chain phosphorylation system. Thus, this SM-3 cell line is expected to serve as a useful model for examining biochemical and physiological phenomena of smooth muscle.