Growth abnormalities in cultured mesangial cells from rats with spontaneous glomerulosclerosis

1995 
Growth abnormalities in cultured mesangial cells from rats with spontaneous glomerulosclerosis. Age-related glomerulosclerosis (GS) occurs in normotensive rats of the Milan strain (MNS), but not in genetically-matched hypertensive animals (MHS). Altered mesangial cell (MC) proliferation and matrix expansion are common features of the glomerular scarring process. We evaluated proliferation and matrix protein synthesis of cultured MC from MNS and MHS animals aged 1 and 8 months, that is, before and after the occurrence of GS. [ 3 H]-thymidine (TdR) incorporation into DNA of MC from MNS rats stimulated by 10% FBS serum increased with donor aging from 115 ± 6.0 to 176 ± 15, P 2+ concentration ([Ca 2+ ] i ) rised from 115 ± 19 to 220 ± 32 nM and from 112 ± 24 to 734 ± 136 nM when fura-2-loaded cells from young and old MNS rats, respectively, were stimulated with 1% FBS. The rate of collagen production also increased with donor age, as well as collagen IV and laminin B1 mRNA expression. In contrast, in MC from MHS rats both DNA synthesis and cell replication rate declined as function of donor age. No differences in the [Ca 2+ ] i responses to FBS were observed, nor collagen production changed with MHS rat senescence. We conclude that the age-associated decline of proliferative activity in MC from MHS animals could actually reflect a normal process of cell aging, possibly protecting from the occurrence of GS. At variance, in MNS rat-derived cells such physiologic process may be genetically altered. This may translate into an age-dependent hyperresponsiveness to growth stimuli, thereby facilitating the development of GS.
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