Morgan Joshua T, Stewart Wade G, McKee Robert A, Gleghorn Jason P
Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Delaware, 161 Colburn Lab, Newark, DE 19716 USA.
Present Address: Department of Bioengineering, University of California, Riverside, CA USA.
Cell Mol Bioeng. 2018 Oct;11(5):309-320. doi: 10.1007/s12195-018-0538-7. Epub 2018 Jul 16.
INTRODUCTION –: Clinical observations and animal models suggest a critical role for the dynamic regulation of transmural pressure and peristaltic airway smooth muscle contractions for proper lung development. However, it is currently unclear how such mechanical signals are transduced into molecular and transcriptional changes at the cell level. To connect these physical findings to a mechanotransduction mechanism, we identified a known mechanosensor, TRPV4, as a component of this pathway.
METHODS –: Embryonic mouse lung explants were cultured on membranes and in submersion culture to modulate explant transmural pressure. Time-lapse imaging was used to capture active changes in lung biology, and whole-mount images were used to visualize the organization of the epithelial, smooth muscle, and vascular compartments. TRPV4 activity was modulated by pharmacological agonism and inhibition.
RESULTS –: TRPV4 expression is present in the murine lung with strong localization to the epithelium and major pulmonary blood vessels. TRPV4 agonism and inhibition resulted in hyper- and hypoplastic airway branching, smooth muscle differentiation, and lung growth, respectively. Smooth muscle contractions also doubled in frequency with agonism and were reduced by 60% with inhibition demonstrating a functional role consistent with levels of smooth muscle differentiation. Activation of TRPV4 increased the vascular capillary density around the distal airways, and inhibition resulted in a near complete loss of the vasculature.
CONCLUSIONS –: These studies have identified TRPV4 as a potential mechanosensor involved in transducing mechanical forces on the airways to molecular and transcriptional events that regulate the morphogenesis of the three essential tissue compartments in the lung.
临床观察和动物模型表明,跨壁压力的动态调节和蠕动性气道平滑肌收缩对肺的正常发育起着关键作用。然而,目前尚不清楚这种机械信号如何在细胞水平上转化为分子和转录变化。为了将这些物理发现与机械转导机制联系起来,我们确定了一种已知的机械传感器TRPV4作为该途径的一个组成部分。
将胚胎小鼠肺外植体培养在膜上并进行浸没培养,以调节外植体的跨壁压力。采用延时成像来捕捉肺生物学的动态变化,并用整体图像来观察上皮、平滑肌和血管腔室的组织结构。通过药理学激动和抑制来调节TRPV4活性。
TRPV4在小鼠肺中表达,主要定位于上皮和主要肺血管。TRPV4激动和抑制分别导致气道分支增生和发育不全、平滑肌分化以及肺生长。平滑肌收缩频率在激动时增加一倍,在抑制时降低60%,表明其功能作用与平滑肌分化水平一致。TRPV4的激活增加了远端气道周围的血管毛细血管密度,抑制则导致血管几乎完全丧失。
这些研究已确定TRPV4是一种潜在的机械传感器,参与将气道上的机械力转化为调节肺中三个基本组织腔室形态发生的分子和转录事件。