Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Virginia , Charlottesville, Virginia.
Department of Medicine, University of Virginia , Charlottesville, Virginia.
Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol. 2018 Oct 1;315(4):H1041-H1050. doi: 10.1152/ajpheart.00088.2018. Epub 2018 Jul 20.
Previous studies have suggested that the composition and global mechanical properties of the scar tissue that forms after a myocardial infarction (MI) are key determinants of long-term survival, and emerging therapies such as biomaterial injection are designed in part to alter those mechanical properties. However, recent evidence suggests that local mechanics regulate scar formation post-MI, so that perturbing infarct mechanics could have unexpected consequences. We therefore tested the effect of changes in local mechanical environment on scar collagen turnover, accumulation, and alignment in 77 Sprague-Dawley rats at 1, 2, 3 and 6 wk post-MI by sewing a Dacron patch to the epicardium to eliminate circumferential strain while permitting continued longitudinal stretching with each heart beat. We found that collagen in healing infarcts aligned parallel to regional strain and perpendicular to the preinfarction muscle and collagen fiber direction, strongly supporting our hypothesis that mechanical environment is the primary determinant of scar collagen alignment. Mechanical reinforcement reduced levels of carboxy-terminal propeptide of type I procollagen (PICP; a biomarker for collagen synthesis) in samples collected by microdialysis significantly, particularly in the first 2 wk. Reinforcement also reduced carboxy-terminal telopeptide of type I collagen (ICTP; a biomarker for collagen degradation), particularly at later time points. These alterations in collagen turnover produced no change in collagen area fraction as measured by histology but significantly reduced wall thickness in the reinforced scars compared with untreated controls. Our findings confirm the importance of regional mechanics in regulating scar formation after infarction and highlight the potential for therapies that reduce stretch to also reduce wall thickness in healing infarcts. NEW & NOTEWORTHY This study shows that therapies such as surgical reinforcement, which reduce stretch in healing infarcts, can also reduce collagen synthesis and wall thickness and modify collagen alignment in postinfarction scars.
先前的研究表明,心肌梗死后形成的疤痕组织的组成和整体力学性能是长期存活的关键决定因素,而新兴的治疗方法,如生物材料注射,部分旨在改变这些力学性能。然而,最近的证据表明,局部力学在梗死后调节疤痕形成,因此改变梗塞力学可能会产生意想不到的后果。因此,我们通过在心脏跳动时用涤纶补丁将心包缝合到心外膜上来消除圆周应变,同时允许继续纵向拉伸,从而在 77 只 Sprague-Dawley 大鼠心肌梗死后 1、2、3 和 6 周时测试改变局部力学环境对疤痕胶原周转、积累和排列的影响。我们发现,愈合梗塞中的胶原与区域应变平行排列,与梗死后的肌肉和胶原纤维方向垂直排列,这强烈支持了我们的假设,即力学环境是疤痕胶原排列的主要决定因素。机械加固显著降低了通过微透析收集的样本中 I 型前胶原羧基末端前肽(胶原合成的生物标志物)的水平,尤其是在前 2 周。加固还降低了 I 型胶原羧基末端肽(胶原降解的生物标志物),尤其是在稍后的时间点。胶原周转的这些改变并没有通过组织学测量的胶原面积分数的变化来表现,但与未治疗的对照组相比,加固疤痕的壁厚度显著降低。我们的发现证实了区域力学在梗死后调节疤痕形成的重要性,并强调了减少拉伸的治疗方法也可能降低愈合梗塞中的壁厚度的潜力。
此研究表明,诸如手术加固等减少愈合梗塞中拉伸的治疗方法,也可以减少胶原合成和壁厚度,并改变梗死后疤痕中的胶原排列。