4.8 Article

Mechanosensitive smooth muscle cell phenotypic plasticity emerging from a null state and the balance between Rac and Rho

Journal

CELL REPORTS
Volume 35, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2021.109019

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Funding

  1. NIH [HL137232]
  2. Center for Engineering MechanoBiology
  3. NSF Science and Technology Center [CMMI 1548571]
  4. American Heart Association [18POST34030013]

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Reversible differentiation of vascular smooth muscle cells plays a critical role in vascular biology and disease. Cellular response to arterial extracellular matrix stiffness generates different endpoints, which are mediated by Rac-Rho homeostasis.
Reversible differentiation of vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) plays a critical role in vascular biology and disease. Changes in VSMC differentiation correlate with stiffness of the arterial extracellular matrix (ECM), but causal relationships remain unclear. We show that VSMC plasticity is mechanosensitive and that both the de-differentiated and differentiated fates are promoted by the same ECM stiffness. Differential equations developed to model this behavior predicted that a null VSMC state generates the dual fates in response to ECM stiffness. Direct measurements of cellular forces, proliferation, and contractile gene expression validated these predictions and showed that fate outcome is mediated by Rac-Rho homeostasis. Rac, through distinct effects on YAP and TAZ, is required for both fates. Rho drives the contractile state alone, so its level of activity, relative to Rac, drives phenotypic choice. Our results show how the cellular response to a single ECM stiffness generates bi-stability and VSMC plasticity.

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