4.5 Article

Proteomic Alterations Associated with Biomechanical Dysfunction are Early Processes in the Emilin1 Deficient Mouse Model of Aortic Valve Disease

Journal

ANNALS OF BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING
Volume 45, Issue 11, Pages 2548-2562

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10439-017-1899-0

Keywords

Valves; Proteomics; Biomechanics; Aging; TGF-beta1; Extracellular matrix; Protein interaction networks

Funding

  1. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences of the NIH [UL1 TR000445]
  2. National Institute of General Medical Sciences [P20 GM103542-06]
  3. National Heart Lung and Blood Institute of the NIH [HL117851]
  4. Cincinnati Children's Research Foundation
  5. Institutional Clinical and Translational Science Award [NIH/NCRR 8UL1TR000077]

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Aortic valve (AV) disease involves stiffening of the AV cusp with progression characterized by inflammation, fibrosis, and calcification. Here, we examine the relationship between biomechanical valve function and proteomic changes before and after the development of AV pathology in the Emilin-/-mouse model of latentAVdisease. Biomechanical studies were performed to quantify tissue stiffness at the macro (micropipette) and micro (atomic force microscopy (AFM)) levels. Micropipette studies showed that the Emilin-/- AV annulus and cusp regions demonstrated increased stiffness only after the onset of AV disease. AFM studies showed that the Emilin-/- cusp stiffens before the onset of AV disease and worsens with the onset of disease. Proteomes from AV cusps were investigated to identify protein functions, pathways, and interaction network alterations that occur with ageand genotype-related valve stiffening. Protein alterations due to Emilin1 deficiency, including changes in pathways and functions, preceded biomechanical aberrations, resulting in marked depletion of extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins interacting with TGFB1, including latent transforming growth factor beta 3 (LTBP3), fibulin 5 (FBLN5), and cartilage intermediate layer protein 1 (CILP1). This study identifies proteomic dysregulation is associated with biomechanical dysfunction as early pathogenic processes in the Emilin-/- model of AV disease.

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