4.8 Article

Heart-Specific Stiffening in Early Embryos Parallels Matrix and Myosin Expression to Optimize Beating

Journal

CURRENT BIOLOGY
Volume 23, Issue 23, Pages 2434-2439

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2013.10.057

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [P01DK032094, R01HL062352, NCATS-8UL1TR000003]
  2. National Science Foundation (LRSM-MRSEC)
  3. Division Of Materials Research
  4. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien [1104637] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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In development and differentiation, morphological changes often accompany mechanical changes [1], but it is unclear whether or when cells in embryos sense tissue elasticity. The earliest embryo is uniformly pliable, while adult tissues vary widely in mechanics from soft brain and stiff heart to rigid bone [2]. However, cell sensitivity to microenvironment elasticity is debated based in part on results from complex three-dimensional culture models [3]. Regenerative cardiology provides strong motivation to clarify any cell-level sensitivities to tissue elasticity because rigid postinfarct regions limit pumping by the adult heart [4]. Here, we focus on the spontaneously beating embryonic heart and sparsely cultured cardiomyocytes, including cells derived from pluripotent stem cells. Tissue elasticity, E-t, increases daily for heart to 1-2 kPa by embryonic day 4 (E4), and although this is similar to 10-fold softer than adult heart, the beating contractions of E4 cardiomyocytes prove optimal at similar to E-t,E-E4 both in vivo and in vitro. Proteomics reveals daily increases in a small subset of proteins, namely collagen plus cardiac-specific excitation-contraction proteins. Rapid softening of the heart's matrix with collagenase or stiffening it with enzymatic crosslinking suppresses beating. Sparsely cultured E4 cardiomyocytes on collagen-coated gels likewise show maximal contraction on matrices with native E4 stiffness, highlighting cell-intrinsic mechanosensitivity. While an optimal elasticity for striation proves consistent with the mathematics of force-driven sarcomere registration, contraction wave speed is linear in E-t as theorized for excitation-contraction coupled to matrix elasticity. Pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes also prove to be mechano-sensitive to matrix and thus generalize the main observation that myosin II organization and contractile function are optimally matched to the load contributed by matrix elasticity.

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