Maternal smoking and prostacyclin production by cultured endothelial cells from umbilical arteries

1984 
Abstract A study was made of the production of prostacyclin (PGI 2 ) by cultured endothelial cells from the umbilical veins of mothers who smoked and of matched mothers who did not smoke. Cells were obtained from 58 umbilical cords from 22 apparently healthy women, 11 mild smokers (less than 15 cigarettes per day), and 25 heavy smokers (more than 15 cigarettes per day). Production of PGI 2 by the cells was calculated by measuring the amount of 6-keto-prostaglandin F 1α released in the culture medium after the addition of arachidonic acid, by means of a specific radioimmunoassay. Endothelial cells from mild and heavy smokers were significantly less able to grow and to reach confluency than cells from nonsmokers. Smoking also resulted in a marked reduction in the capacity of cultured cells to produce PGI 2 . This was particularly apparent for the cells from heavy smokers. Smoking during pregnancy appears to induce some modifications in the enzymes of the prostacyclin pathway which persist in endothelial cells undergoing replication in primary culture even in the absence of the pathogenic factor.
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