Mechanical force regulation of myofibroblast differentiation in cardiac fibroblasts

J Wang, H Chen, A Seth… - American Journal of …, 2003 - journals.physiology.org
J Wang, H Chen, A Seth, CA McCulloch
American Journal of Physiology-Heart and Circulatory Physiology, 2003journals.physiology.org
The myocardium responds to chronic pressure or volume overload by activation and
proliferation of cardiac fibroblasts and their differentiation into myofibroblasts. Because α-
smooth muscle actin (SMA) expression is the classical marker for myofibroblast
differentiation, we examined force-induced SMA expression and regulation by specific
MAPK pathways. Rat cardiac fibroblasts were separated from myocytes and smooth muscle
cells, cultured, and phenotyped by using the presence of SMA, vimentin, and ED-A …
The myocardium responds to chronic pressure or volume overload by activation and proliferation of cardiac fibroblasts and their differentiation into myofibroblasts. Because α-smooth muscle actin (SMA) expression is the classical marker for myofibroblast differentiation, we examined force-induced SMA expression and regulation by specific MAPK pathways. Rat cardiac fibroblasts were separated from myocytes and smooth muscle cells, cultured, and phenotyped by using the presence of SMA, vimentin, and ED-A fibronectin and the absence of desmin as myofibroblast markers. Static tensile forces (0.65 pN/μm2) were applied to fibroblasts via collagen-coated magnetite beads. In neonatal cardiac fibroblasts cultured for 1 day, immunostaining and Western and Northern blotting showed very low basal levels of SMA. After the application of force, there were 1.5- to 2-fold increases of SMA protein and mRNA within 4 h. Force-induced SMA expression was dependent on ERK phosphorylation and on intact actin filaments. In contrast to cells cultured for 1 day, cells grown for 3 days on rigid substrates showed prominent stress fibers and high basal levels of SMA, which were reduced by 32% within 4 h after force application. ERK was not activated by force, but p38 phosphorylation was required for force-induced inhibition of SMA expression. These results indicate that mechanical force-induced regulation of SMA content is dependent on myofibroblast differentiation and by selective activation of MAPKs.
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