Highlights d TGF-bR2 ablation combined with hypercholesterolemia reprograms smooth muscle cells d Reprogrammed SMCs undergo clonal differentiation into varied mesenchymal lineages d Loss of normal aortic SMCs and increased non-SMC mass induce aortic aneurysms
A new model for the mechanochemical response of smooth muscle is presented. The focus is on the response of the actin-myosin complex and on the related generation of force (or stress). The chemical (kinetic) model describes the cross-bridge interactions with the thin filament in which the calcium-dependent myosin phosphorylation is the only regulatory mechanism. The new mechanical model is based on Hill's three-component model and it includes one internal state variable that describes the contraction/relaxation of the contractile units. It is characterized by a strain-energy function and an evolution law incorporating only a few material parameters with clear physical meaning. The proposed model satisfies the second law of thermodynamics. The results of the combined coupled model are broadly consistent with isometric and isotonic experiments on smooth muscle tissue. The simulations suggest that the matrix in which the actin-myosin complex is embedded does have a viscous property. It is straightforward for implementation into a finite element program in order to solve more complex boundary-value problems such as the control of short-term changes in lumen diameter of arteries due to mechanochemical signals.
Objective
Transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-β) is a pleiotropic cytokine having diverse roles in vascular morphogenesis, homeostasis, and pathogenesis. Altered activity of and signaling through TGF-β has been implicated in thoracic aortic aneurysms and dissections, conditions characterized by a reduced structural integrity of the wall that associates with altered biomechanics and mechanobiology. We quantify and contrast the passive and active biaxial biomechanical properties of the ascending and proximal descending thoracic aorta in a mouse model of altered TGF-β signaling, with and without treatment with rapamycin.
Approach and Results
Postnatal disruption of the gene (Tgfbr2) that codes the type II TGF-β receptor compromises vessel-level contractility and elasticity. Daily treatment with rapamycin, an mTOR inhibitor that protects against aortic dissection in these mice, largely preserves or restores the contractile function while the passive properties remain compromised. Importantly, this increased smooth muscle contractility protects an otherwise vulnerable aortic wall from pressure-induced intramural delaminations in vitro.
Conclusions
Notwithstanding the protection afforded by rapamycin in vivo and in vitro, the residual mechanical dysfunctionality suggests a need for caution if rapamycin is to be considered as a potential therapeutic. There is a need for in vivo evaluations in cases of increased hemodynamic loading, including hypertension or extreme exercise, which could unduly stress a structurally vulnerable aortic wall. Given these promising early results, however, such studies are clearly warranted.
The precise role of smooth muscle cell contractility in elastic arteries remains unclear, but accumulating evidence suggests that smooth muscle dysfunction plays an important role in the development of thoracic aortic aneurysms and dissections (TAADs). Given the increasing availability of mouse models of these conditions, there is a special opportunity to study roles of contractility ex vivo in intact vessels subjected to different mechanical loads. In parallel, of course, there is a similar need to study smooth muscle contractility in models that do not predispose to TAADs, particularly in cases where disease might be expected. Multiple mouse models having compromised glycoproteins that normally associate with elastin to form medial elastic fibers present with TAADs, yet those with fibulin-5 deficiency do not. In this paper, we show that deletion of the fibulin-5 gene results in a significantly diminished contractility of the thoracic aorta in response to potassium loading despite otherwise preserved characteristic active behaviors, including axial force generation and rates of contraction and relaxation. Interestingly, this diminished response manifests around an altered passive state that is defined primarily by a reduced in vivo axial stretch. Given this significant coupling between passive and active properties, a lack of significant changes in passive material stiffness may help to offset the diminished contractility and thereby protect the wall from detrimental mechanosensing and its sequelae.
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