4.6 Article

Excessive adventitial stress drives inflammation-mediated fibrosis in hypertensive aortic remodelling in mice

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY INTERFACE
Volume 18, Issue 180, Pages -

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsif.2021.0336

Keywords

aorta; fibrosis; stiffness; inflammation; contractility; C57BL; 6 J; 129S6; SvEvTac; smooth muscle phenotype

Funding

  1. NIH [R01 HL105297, P01 HL134605, U01 HL142518, R01 HL146723]
  2. Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research [Rubicon 452172006]
  3. European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program [793805]

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The study found that hypertension-induced aortic remodeling may be adaptive or maladaptive, depending on different immuno-mechanical mechanisms. The aortas of 129S6/SvEvTac mice showed near mechano-adaptive remodeling, while those of C57BL/6 J mice exhibited grossly maladaptive remodeling.
Hypertension induces significant aortic remodelling, often adaptive but sometimes not. To identify immuno-mechanical mechanisms responsible for differential remodelling, we studied thoracic aortas from 129S6/SvEvTac and C57BL/6 J mice before and after continuous 14-day angiotensin II infusion, which elevated blood pressure similarly in both strains. Histological and biomechanical assessments of excised vessels were similar at baseline, suggesting a common homeostatic set-point for mean wall stress. Histology further revealed near mechano-adaptive remodelling of the hypertensive 129S6/SvEvTac aortas, but a grossly maladaptive remodelling of C57BL/6 J aortas. Bulk RNA sequencing suggested that increased smooth muscle contractile processes promoted mechano-adaptation of 129S6/SvEvTac aortas while immune processes prevented adaptation of C57BL/6 J aortas. Functional studies confirmed an increased vasoconstrictive capacity of the former while immunohistochemistry demonstrated marked increases in inflammatory cells in the latter. We then used multiple computational biomechanical models to test the hypothesis that excessive adventitial wall stress correlates with inflammatory cell infiltration. These models consistently predicted that increased vasoconstriction against an increased pressure coupled with modest deposition of new matrix thickens the wall appropriately, restoring wall stress towards homeostatic consistent with adaptive remodelling. By contrast, insufficient vasoconstriction permits high wall stresses and exuberant inflammation-driven matrix deposition, especially in the adventitia, reflecting compromised homeostasis and gross maladaptation.

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