4.2 Article

The mechanical memory of lung myofibroblasts

Journal

INTEGRATIVE BIOLOGY
Volume 4, Issue 4, Pages 410-421

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c2ib00149g

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Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [210820]
  2. CIHR/NSERC [1004005]
  3. Canada Foundation for Innovation
  4. Ontario Research Fund [26653]
  5. Heart and Stroke Foundation Ontario [NA7086]
  6. Gebert Ruf Foundation Switzerland [531556]

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Fibroblasts differentiate into the highly synthetic and contractile myofibroblast phenotype when exposed to substrates with an elastic modulus corresponding to pathologically stiff fibrotic tissue. Cellular responses to changes in substrate stiffness are typically analyzed after hours or days, which does not enable the monitoring of myofibroblast persistence, a hallmark of fibrosis. To determine long-lasting effects on the fibrotic behavior of lung fibroblasts, we followed a novel approach of explanting and repeatedly passaging fibroblasts on silicone substrates with stiffness representing various states of lung health. Fibrotic activity was determined by assaying for myofibroblast proliferation, cell contractility, expression of alpha-smooth muscle actin, extracellular matrix and active TGF beta 1. As predicted, myofibroblast activity was low on healthy soft substrates and increased with increasing substrate stiffness. However, explanting and mechanically priming lung fibroblasts for 3 weeks on pathologically stiff substrates resulted in sustained myofibroblast activity even after the cells were returned to healthy soft cultures for 2 weeks. Such primed cells retained higher fibrotic activity than cells that had been exclusively cultured on soft substrates, and were not statistically different from cells continuously passaged on stiff surfaces. Inversely, priming lung fibroblasts for 3 weeks on soft substrates partially protected from myofibroblast activation after the shift to stiff substrates. Hence, mechano-sensed information relating to physical conditions of the local cellular environment could permanently induce fibrotic behavior of lung fibroblasts. This priming effect has important implications for the progression and persistence of aggressive fibrotic diseases such as idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis.

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