Ventilator-induced lung injury (VILI) occurs in mechanically ventilated patients of respiratory disease and is typically characterized by airway inflammation. However, recent studies increasingly indicate that a major cause of VILI may be the excessive mechanical loading such as high stretch (>10% strain) on airway smooth muscle cells (ASMCs) due to mechanical ventilation (MV). Although ASMCs are the primary mechanosensitive cells in airways and contribute to various airway inflammation diseases, it is still unclear how they respond to high stretch and what mediates such a response. Therefore, we used whole genome-wide mRNA-sequencing (mRNA-Seq), bioinformatics, and functional identification to systematically analyze the mRNA expression profiles and signaling pathway enrichment of cultured human ASMCs exposed to high stretch (13% strain), aiming to screen the susceptible signaling pathway through which cells respond to high stretch. The data revealed that in response to high stretch, 111 mRNAs with count ≥100 in ASMCs were significantly differentially expressed (defined as DE-mRNAs). These DE-mRNAs are mainly enriched in endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress-related signaling pathways. ER stress inhibitor (TUDCA) abolished high-stretch-enhanced mRNA expression of genes associated with ER stress, downstream inflammation signaling, and major inflammatory cytokines. These results demonstrate in a data-driven approach that in ASMCs, high stretch mainly induced ER stress and activated ER stress-related signaling and downstream inflammation response. Therefore, it suggests that ER stress and related signaling pathways in ASMCs may be potential targets for timely diagnosis and intervention of MV-related pulmonary airway diseases such as VILI.
Inspired by the well-known phenomenon of stretch-induced airway dilation in normal lungs and the emerging stretch-responsive Piezo1 channels that can be chemically activated by specific agonists such as Yoda1, we attempted to investigate whether chemical activation of Piezo1 by Yoda1 can modulate the biomechanical behaviors of airway smooth muscle cells (ASMCs) so that it may be exploited as a novel approach for bronchodilation. Thus, we treated in vitro cultured rat ASMCs with Yoda1, and examined the cells for calcium signaling, cell stiffness, traction force, cell migration, and the mRNA expression and distribution of molecules relevant to cell biomechanics. The data show that ASMCs expressed abundant mRNA of Piezo1. ASMCs exposed to 1 µM Yoda1 exhibited a potent but transient Ca 2 signaling, and treatment with 1 µM Yoda1 for 24 h led to decreased cell stiffness and traction force, all of which were partially reversed by Piezo1 inhibitor GsMTx4 and Piezo1 knockdown, respectively. In addition, ASMCs treated with 1 µM Yoda1 for 24 h exhibited impaired horizontal but enhanced vertical cell migration, as well as significant changes in key components of cells' contractile machinery including the structure and distribution of stress fibers and alphasmooth muscle actin (α-SMA) fibrils, the mRNA expression of molecules associated with cell biomechanics. These results provide the first evidence that chemical activation of Piezo1 by Yoda1 resulted in marked prorelaxation alterations of biomechanical behaviors and contractile machinery of the ASMCs. These findings suggest that Piezo1-specific agonists may indeed have great potential as alternative drug agents for relaxing ASMCs.
The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) poses a never before seen challenge to human health and the world economy. However, it is difficult to widely use conventional animal and cell culture models in understanding the underlying pathological mechanisms of COVID-19, which in turn hinders the development of relevant therapeutic treatments, including drugs. To overcome this challenge, various three-dimensional (3D) pulmonary cell culture models such as organoids are emerging as an innovative toolset for simulating the pathophysiology occurring in the respiratory system, including bronchial airways, alveoli, capillary network, and pulmonary interstitium, which provide a robust and powerful platform for studying the process and underlying mechanisms of SARS-CoV-2 infection among the potential primary targets in the lung. This review introduces the key features of some of these recently developed tools, including organoid, lung-on-a-chip, and 3D bioprinting, which can recapitulate different structural compartments of the lung and lung function, in particular, accurately resembling the human-relevant pathophysiology of SARS-CoV-2 infection in vivo. In addition, the recent progress in developing organoids for alveolar and airway disease modeling and their applications for discovering drugs against SARS-CoV-2 infection are highlighted. These innovative 3D cell culture models together may hold the promise to fully understand the pathogenesis and eventually eradicate the pandemic of COVID-19.
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