Tandon Ishita, Razavi Atefeh, Ravishankar Prashanth, Walker Addison, Sturdivant Nasya M, Lam Ngoc Thien, Wolchok Jeffrey C, Balachandran Kartik
Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, AR 72701, USA.
Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, AR 72701, USA.
J Biomech. 2016 Oct 3;49(14):3289-3297. doi: 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2016.08.013. Epub 2016 Aug 16.
Valve interstitial cells are dispersed throughout the heart valve and play an important role in maintaining its integrity, function, and phenotype. While prior studies have detailed the role of external mechanical and biological factors in the function of the interstitial cell, the role of cell shape in regulating contractile function, in the context of normal and diseased phenotypes, is not well understood. Thus, the aim of this study was to elucidate the link between cell shape, phenotype, and acute functional contractile output. Valve interstitial cell monolayers with defined cellular shapes were engineered via constraining cells to micropatterned protein lines (10, 20, 40, 60 or 80µm wide). Samples were cultured in either normal or osteogenic medium. Cellular shape and architecture were quantified via fluorescent imaging techniques. Cellular contractility was quantified using a valve thin film assay and phenotype analyzed via western blotting, zymography, and qRT-PCR. In all pattern widths, cells were highly aligned, with maximum cell and nuclear elongation occurring for the 10μm pattern width. Cellular contractility was highest for the most elongated cells, but was also increased in cells on the widest pattern (80μm) that also had increased CX43 expression, suggesting a role for both elongated shape and increased cell-cell contact in regulating contractility. Cells cultured in osteogenic medium had greater expression of smooth muscle markers and correspondingly increased contractile stress responses. Cell phenotype did not significantly correlate with altered cell shape, suggesting that cellular shape plays a significant role in the regulation of valve contractile function independent of phenotype.
瓣膜间质细胞分散在整个心脏瓣膜中,在维持其完整性、功能和表型方面发挥着重要作用。虽然先前的研究已经详细阐述了外部机械和生物学因素在间质细胞功能中的作用,但在正常和疾病表型的背景下,细胞形状在调节收缩功能中的作用尚不清楚。因此,本研究的目的是阐明细胞形状、表型与急性功能性收缩输出之间的联系。通过将细胞限制在微图案化的蛋白质线(宽10、20、40、60或80μm)上来构建具有确定细胞形状的瓣膜间质细胞单层。样品在正常或成骨培养基中培养。通过荧光成像技术对细胞形状和结构进行量化。使用瓣膜薄膜试验对细胞收缩性进行量化,并通过蛋白质免疫印迹、酶谱分析和定量逆转录聚合酶链反应对表型进行分析。在所有图案宽度下,细胞高度排列,10μm图案宽度的细胞和细胞核伸长最大。最细长的细胞收缩性最高,但在最宽图案(80μm)的细胞中也有所增加,这些细胞的CX43表达也增加,这表明细长形状和增加的细胞间接触在调节收缩性中都起作用。在成骨培养基中培养的细胞平滑肌标志物表达更高,相应地收缩应激反应增加。细胞表型与细胞形状改变无显著相关性,这表明细胞形状在独立于表型的瓣膜收缩功能调节中起重要作用。