Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
Biomaterials. 2013 Jan;34(3):677-84. doi: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2012.09.079. Epub 2012 Oct 24.
Endothelial cells (EC) are potent bioregulatory cells, modulating thrombosis, inflammation and control over mural smooth muscle cells and vascular health. The biochemical roles of EC are retained when cells are embedded within three-dimensional (3D) denatured collagen matrices. Though substrate mechanics have long been known to affect cellular morphology and function and 3D-EC systems are increasingly used as therapeutic modalities little is known about the effect of substrate mechanics on EC in these 3D systems. In this work, we examined the effect of isolated changes in modulus on EC growth and morphology, extracellular matrix gene expression, modulation of smooth muscle cell growth, and immunogenicity. EC growth, but not morphology was dependent on scaffold modulus. Increased scaffold modulus reduced secretion of smooth muscle cell growth inhibiting heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGs), but had no effect on secreted growth factors, resulting in a loss of smooth muscle cell growth inhibition by EC on high modulus scaffolds. Expression of ICAM-1, VCAM-1 and induction of CD4(+) T cell proliferation was reduced by increased scaffold modulus, and correlated with changes in integrin α5 expression. Expression of several common ECM proteins by EC on stiffer substrates dropped, including collagen IV(α1), collagen IV(α5), fibronectin, HSPGs (perlecan and biglycan). In contrast, expression of elastin and TIMPs were increased. This work shows even modest changes in substrate modulus can have a significant impact on EC function in three-dimensional systems. The mechanism of these changes is not clear, but the data presented here within suggests a model wherein EC attempt to neutralize changes in environmental force balance by altering ECM and integrin expression, leading to changes in effects on downstream signaling and function.
内皮细胞(EC)是一种强大的生物调节细胞,调节血栓形成、炎症以及对血管壁平滑肌细胞的控制和血管健康。当细胞嵌入三维(3D)变性胶原基质中时,其生化作用得以保留。尽管基质力学早已被认为会影响细胞形态和功能,并且 3D-EC 系统越来越多地被用作治疗方式,但对于基质力学对这些 3D 系统中 EC 的影响知之甚少。在这项工作中,我们研究了单独改变模量对 EC 生长和形态、细胞外基质基因表达、平滑肌细胞生长的调节以及免疫原性的影响。EC 的生长,而不是形态,依赖于支架的模量。支架模量的增加减少了平滑肌细胞生长抑制性硫酸乙酰肝素蛋白聚糖(HSPG)的分泌,但对分泌的生长因子没有影响,导致 EC 在高模量支架上失去对平滑肌细胞生长的抑制作用。细胞间黏附分子-1(ICAM-1)、血管细胞黏附分子-1(VCAM-1)的表达和 CD4+T 细胞增殖的诱导减少与整合素 α5 表达的变化有关。EC 在更硬的基质上的几种常见 ECM 蛋白的表达下降,包括胶原 IV(α1)、胶原 IV(α5)、纤连蛋白、HSPGs(硫酸乙酰肝素蛋白聚糖和 biglycan)。相比之下,弹性蛋白和 TIMPs 的表达增加。这项工作表明,基质模量的微小变化都会对 3D 系统中 EC 的功能产生重大影响。这些变化的机制尚不清楚,但这里提出的模型表明,EC 通过改变细胞外基质和整合素的表达来试图中和环境力平衡的变化,从而导致对下游信号转导和功能的变化。