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1.
Nat Methods ; 19(9): 1064-1071, 2022 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36064773

RESUMO

Engineered cardiac tissues derived from human induced pluripotent stem cells offer unique opportunities for patient-specific disease modeling, drug discovery and cardiac repair. Since the first engineered hearts were introduced over two decades ago, human induced pluripotent stem cell-based three-dimensional cardiac organoids and heart-on-a-chip systems have now become mainstays in basic cardiovascular research as valuable platforms for investigating fundamental human pathophysiology and development. However, major obstacles remain to be addressed before the field can truly advance toward commercial and clinical translation. Here we provide a snapshot of the state-of-the-art methods in cardiac tissue engineering, with a focus on in vitro models of the human heart. Looking ahead, we discuss major challenges and opportunities in the field and suggest strategies for enabling broad acceptance of engineered cardiac tissues as models of cardiac pathophysiology and testbeds for the development of therapies.


Assuntos
Células-Tronco Pluripotentes Induzidas , Engenharia Tecidual , Descoberta de Drogas , Coração/fisiologia , Humanos , Células-Tronco Pluripotentes Induzidas/fisiologia , Miócitos Cardíacos , Organoides , Engenharia Tecidual/métodos
2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 118(48)2021 11 30.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34810266

RESUMO

Physicochemical principles such as stoichiometry and fractal assembly can give rise to characteristic scaling between components that potentially include coexpressed transcripts. For key structural factors within the nucleus and extracellular matrix, we discover specific gene-gene scaling exponents across many of the 32 tumor types in The Cancer Genome Atlas, and we demonstrate utility in predicting patient survival as well as scaling-informed machine learning (SIML). All tumors with adjacent tissue data show cancer-elevated proliferation genes, with some genes scaling with the nuclear filament LMNB1, including the transcription factor FOXM1 that we show directly regulates LMNB1 SIML shows that such regulated cancers cluster together with longer overall survival than dysregulated cancers, but high LMNB1 and FOXM1 in half of regulated cancers surprisingly predict poor survival, including for liver cancer. COL1A1 is also studied because it too increases in tumors, and a pan-cancer set of fibrosis genes shows substoichiometric scaling with COL1A1 but predicts patient outcome only for liver cancer-unexpectedly being prosurvival. Single-cell RNA-seq data show nontrivial scaling consistent with power laws from bulk RNA and protein analyses, and SIML segregates synthetic from contractile cancer fibroblasts. Our scaling approach thus yields fundamentals-based power laws relatable to survival, gene function, and experiments.


Assuntos
Fibrose/metabolismo , Lamina Tipo B/química , Neoplasias Hepáticas/metabolismo , Núcleo Celular/metabolismo , Proliferação de Células , Sobrevivência Celular , Colágeno/química , Biologia Computacional , DNA/metabolismo , Matriz Extracelular/metabolismo , Perfilação da Expressão Gênica , Regulação Neoplásica da Expressão Gênica , Genômica , Humanos , Estimativa de Kaplan-Meier , Neoplasias Hepáticas/genética , Espectrometria de Massas , Neoplasias/metabolismo , Oncogenes , Prognóstico , Proteômica/métodos , Estresse Mecânico , Transcriptoma , Resultado do Tratamento
3.
J Mol Cell Cardiol ; 157: 56-65, 2021 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33895197

RESUMO

Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) have emerged as a key component of cardiac tissue engineering, enabling studies of cardiovascular disease mechanisms, drug responses, and developmental processes in human 3D tissue models assembled from isogenic cells. Since the very first engineered heart tissues were introduced more than two decades ago, a wide array of iPSC-derived cardiac spheroids, organoids, and heart-on-a-chip models have been developed incorporating the latest available technologies and materials. In this review, we will first outline the fundamental biological building blocks required to form a functional unit of cardiac muscle, including iPSC-derived cells differentiated by soluble factors (e.g., small molecules), extracellular matrix scaffolds, and exogenous biophysical maturation cues. We will then summarize the different fabrication approaches and strategies employed to reconstruct the heart in vitro at varying scales and geometries. Finally, we will discuss how these platforms, with continued improvements in scalability and tissue maturity, can contribute to both basic cardiovascular research and clinical applications in the future.


Assuntos
Diferenciação Celular , Células-Tronco Pluripotentes Induzidas/citologia , Células-Tronco Pluripotentes Induzidas/metabolismo , Miocárdio/citologia , Miocárdio/metabolismo , Miócitos Cardíacos/citologia , Miócitos Cardíacos/metabolismo , Regeneração , Animais , Materiais Biocompatíveis , Biomarcadores , Técnicas de Cultura de Células , Desenvolvimento de Medicamentos , Descoberta de Drogas , Regulação da Expressão Gênica no Desenvolvimento , Humanos , Técnicas de Cultura de Tecidos , Engenharia Tecidual/métodos , Alicerces Teciduais
4.
Methods ; 157: 3-14, 2019 03 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30593865

RESUMO

Tissues such as brain, muscle, and bone differ greatly not only in their biological functions but also in their mechanical properties. Brain is far softer than muscle while bone is the stiffest tissue. Stiffness of extracellular microenvironments affects fundamental cell biological processes such as polarization and DNA replication, which affect nuclear size, shape, and levels of nuclear proteins such as the lamins that modulate gene expression. Reductionist approaches have helped dissect the effects of matrix mechanics away from confounding biochemical signals. Here, we summarize materials and methods for synthesizing and characterizing soft and stiff synthetic hydrogels widely used for mechanobiological studies. Such gels are also easily made to mimic the mechanical heterogeneity of fibrotic tissues. We further describe a nano-thin collagen fiber system, which enables control of anisotropy in addition to stiffness. With the different systems, we illustrate the effects of matrix mechanics on nuclear size, shape, and proteins including the lamins.


Assuntos
Biologia Celular , Técnicas Citológicas/métodos , Matriz Extracelular/ultraestrutura , Anisotropia , Matriz Extracelular/genética , Regulação da Expressão Gênica/genética , Hidrogéis/química , Fenômenos Mecânicos
5.
Semin Cell Dev Biol ; 71: 84-98, 2017 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28587976

RESUMO

Stem cells are particularly 'plastic' cell types that are induced by various cues to become specialized, tissue-functional lineages by switching on the expression of specific gene programs. Matrix stiffness is among the cues that multiple stem cell types can sense and respond to. This seminar-style review focuses on mechanosensing of matrix elasticity in the differentiation or early maturation of a few illustrative stem cell types, with an intended audience of biologists and physical scientists. Contractile forces applied by a cell's acto-myosin cytoskeleton are often resisted by the extracellular matrix and transduced through adhesions and the cytoskeleton ultimately into the nucleus to modulate gene expression. Complexity is added by matrix heterogeneity, and careful scrutiny of the evident stiffness heterogeneity in some model systems resolves some controversies concerning matrix mechanosensing. Importantly, local stiffness tends to dominate, and 'durotaxis' of stem cells toward stiff matrix reveals a dependence of persistent migration on myosin-II force generation and also rigid microtubules that confer directionality. Stem and progenitor cell migration in 3D can be further affected by matrix porosity as well as stiffness, with nuclear size and rigidity influencing niche retention and fate choices. Cell squeezing through rigid pores can even cause DNA damage and genomic changes that contribute to de-differentiation toward stem cell-like states. Contraction of acto-myosin is the essential function of striated muscle, which also exhibit mechanosensitive differentiation and maturation as illustrated in vivo by beating heart cells and by the regenerative mobilization of skeletal muscle stem cells.


Assuntos
Movimento Celular , Núcleo Celular , Miocárdio/citologia , Células-Tronco/citologia , Animais , Coração/embriologia , Humanos , Organogênese
6.
Physiology (Bethesda) ; 33(1): 16-25, 2018 Jan 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29212889

RESUMO

Stem cells mechanosense the stiffness of their microenvironment, which impacts differentiation. Although tissue hydration anti-correlates with stiffness, extracellular matrix (ECM) stiffness is clearly transduced into gene expression via adhesion and cytoskeleton proteins that tune fates. Cytoskeletal reorganization of ECM can create heterogeneity and influence fates, with fibrosis being one extreme.


Assuntos
Diferenciação Celular , Matriz Extracelular/fisiologia , Células-Tronco/fisiologia , Animais , Adesão Celular , Citoesqueleto/fisiologia , Humanos , Mecanotransdução Celular
7.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 113(32): 8939-44, 2016 08 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27457951

RESUMO

In the beating heart, cardiac myocytes (CMs) contract in a coordinated fashion, generating contractile wave fronts that propagate through the heart with each beat. Coordinating this wave front requires fast and robust signaling mechanisms between CMs. The primary signaling mechanism has long been identified as electrical: gap junctions conduct ions between CMs, triggering membrane depolarization, intracellular calcium release, and actomyosin contraction. In contrast, we propose here that, in the early embryonic heart tube, the signaling mechanism coordinating beats is mechanical rather than electrical. We present a simple biophysical model in which CMs are mechanically excitable inclusions embedded within the extracellular matrix (ECM), modeled as an elastic-fluid biphasic material. Our model predicts strong stiffness dependence in both the heartbeat velocity and strain in isolated hearts, as well as the strain for a hydrogel-cultured CM, in quantitative agreement with recent experiments. We challenge our model with experiments disrupting electrical conduction by perfusing intact adult and embryonic hearts with a gap junction blocker, ß-glycyrrhetinic acid (BGA). We find this treatment causes rapid failure in adult hearts but not embryonic hearts-consistent with our hypothesis. Last, our model predicts a minimum matrix stiffness necessary to propagate a mechanically coordinated wave front. The predicted value is in accord with our stiffness measurements at the onset of beating, suggesting that mechanical signaling may initiate the very first heartbeats.


Assuntos
Frequência Cardíaca , Coração/embriologia , Animais , Embrião de Galinha , Junções Comunicantes/fisiologia , Modelos Biológicos , Contração Miocárdica , Miócitos Cardíacos/fisiologia
8.
J Cell Sci ; 127(Pt 11): 2528-41, 2014 Jun 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24639463

RESUMO

Although eukaryotic cells are known to alternate between 'advancing' episodes of fast and persistent movement and 'hesitation' episodes of low speed and low persistence, the molecular mechanism that controls the dynamic changes in morphology, speed and persistence of eukaryotic migratory cells remains unclear. Here, we show that the movement of the interphase nucleus during random cell migration switches intermittently between two distinct modes - rotation and translocation - that follow with high fidelity the sequential rounded and elongated morphologies of the nucleus and cell body, respectively. Nuclear rotation and translocation mediate the stop-and-go motion of the cell through the dynamic formation and dissolution, respectively, of the contractile perinuclear actin cap, which is dynamically coupled to the nuclear lamina and the nuclear envelope through LINC complexes. A persistent cell movement and nuclear translocation driven by the actin cap are halted following the disruption of the actin cap, which in turn allows the cell to repolarize for its next persistent move owing to nuclear rotation mediated by cytoplasmic dynein light intermediate chain 2.


Assuntos
Citoesqueleto de Actina/metabolismo , Núcleo Celular/metabolismo , Dineínas do Citoplasma/metabolismo , Fibroblastos/fisiologia , Lamina Tipo A/metabolismo , Animais , Movimento Celular/genética , Forma do Núcleo Celular/genética , Forma Celular/genética , Células Cultivadas , Dineínas do Citoplasma/genética , Interfase/genética , Lamina Tipo A/genética , Camundongos , RNA Interferente Pequeno/genética , Agregação de Receptores/genética , Rotação
9.
Nat Mater ; 14(9): 951-60, 2015 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26168347

RESUMO

Scarring is a long-lasting problem in higher animals, and reductionist approaches could aid in developing treatments. Here, we show that copolymerization of collagen I with polyacrylamide produces minimal matrix models of scars (MMMS), in which fractal-fibre bundles segregate heterogeneously to the hydrogel subsurface. Matrix stiffens locally-as in scars-while allowing separate control over adhesive-ligand density. The MMMS elicits scar-like phenotypes from mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs): cells spread and polarize quickly, increasing nucleoskeletal lamin-A yet expressing the 'scar marker' smooth muscle actin (SMA) more slowly. Surprisingly, expression responses to MMMS exhibit less cell-to-cell noise than homogeneously stiff gels. Such differences from bulk-average responses arise because a strong SMA repressor, NKX2.5, slowly exits the nucleus on rigid matrices. NKX2.5 overexpression overrides rigid phenotypes, inhibiting SMA and cell spreading, whereas cytoplasm-localized NKX2.5 mutants degrade in well-spread cells. MSCs thus form a 'mechanical memory' of rigidity by progressively suppressing NKX2.5, thereby elevating SMA in a scar-like state.


Assuntos
Núcleo Celular/metabolismo , Cicatriz/metabolismo , Matriz Extracelular/química , Proteínas de Homeodomínio/metabolismo , Células-Tronco Mesenquimais/metabolismo , Nicho de Células-Tronco , Fatores de Transcrição/metabolismo , Resinas Acrílicas/química , Actinas/metabolismo , Transporte Ativo do Núcleo Celular , Animais , Núcleo Celular/patologia , Cicatriz/patologia , Colágeno Tipo I/química , Proteína Homeobox Nkx-2.5 , Camundongos , Modelos Biológicos
10.
Stem Cell Res ; 59: 102638, 2022 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34954454

RESUMO

LMNA-related dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) is caused by pathogenic variants in LMNA and is characterized by left ventricular enlargement, reduced systolic function, and arrhythmia. Here, we generated three human induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) lines from peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) of three DCM patients carrying the same single heterozygous mutation, c.1129C > T, in LMNA. All lines expressed normal iPSC morphology, high levels of pluripotent markers, normal karyotypes, and could differentiate into the three germ layers. These iPSC lines can serve as invaluable tools to model pathological mechanisms of DCM in vitro caused by LMNA mutations.

11.
Stem Cell Res ; 59: 102657, 2022 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34999423

RESUMO

LMNA-related dilated cardiomyopathy (LMNA-DCM) is caused by pathogenic variants in the LMNA gene and is characterized by left ventricular chamber enlargement, reduced systolic function, and arrhythmia. Here, we generated three human induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) lines from peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) of three DCM patients carrying the same single heterozygous mutation, c.398 G > A, in LMNA. All lines exhibited normal iPSC morphology, expressed high levels of pluripotency markers, showed normal karyotypes, and could differentiate into the three germ layers. These patient-specific iPSC lines can serve as invaluable tools to model in vitro pathological mechanisms of LMNA-DCM.

12.
Nucleus ; 13(1): 129-143, 2022 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35293271

RESUMO

Nuclear rupture has long been associated with deficits or defects in lamins, with recent results also indicating a role for actomyosin stress, but key physical determinants of rupture remain unclear. Here, lamin-B filaments stably interact with the nuclear membrane at sites of low Gaussian curvature yet dilute at high curvature to favor rupture, whereas lamin-A depletion requires high strain-rates. Live-cell imaging of lamin-B1 gene-edited cancer cells is complemented by fixed-cell imaging of rupture in: iPS-derived progeria patients cells, cells within beating chick embryo hearts, and cancer cells with multi-site rupture after migration through small pores. Data fit a model of stiff filaments that detach from a curved surface.Rupture is modestly suppressed by inhibiting myosin-II and by hypotonic stress, which slow the strain-rates. Lamin-A dilution and rupture probability indeed increase above a threshold rate of nuclear pulling. Curvature-sensing mechanisms of proteins at plasma membranes, including Piezo1, might thus apply at nuclear membranes.Summary statement: High nuclear curvature drives lamina dilution and nuclear envelope rupture even when myosin stress is inhibited. Stiff filaments generally dilute from sites of high Gaussian curvature, providing mathematical fits of experiments.


Assuntos
Lamina Tipo B , Lâmina Nuclear , Animais , Núcleo Celular/metabolismo , Embrião de Galinha , Humanos , Canais Iônicos/metabolismo , Lamina Tipo A/genética , Lamina Tipo A/metabolismo , Lamina Tipo B/metabolismo , Membrana Nuclear/metabolismo , Lâmina Nuclear/metabolismo
13.
Matrix Biol ; 85-86: 34-46, 2020 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31201857

RESUMO

Tissue homeostasis depends on a balance of synthesis and degradation of constituent proteins, with turnover of a given protein potentially regulated by its use. Extracellular matrix (ECM) is predominantly composed of fibrillar collagens that exhibit tension-sensitive degradation, which we review here at different levels of hierarchy. Past experiments and recent proteomics measurements together suggest that mechanical strain stabilizes collagen against enzymatic degradation at the scale of tissues and fibrils whereas isolated collagen molecules exhibit a biphasic behavior that depends on load magnitude. Within a Michaelis-Menten framework, collagenases at constant concentration effectively exhibit a low activity on substrate fibrils when the fibrils are strained by tension. Mechanisms of such mechanosensitive regulation are surveyed together with relevant interactions of collagen fibrils with cells.


Assuntos
Colagenases/metabolismo , Colágenos Fibrilares/metabolismo , Matriz Extracelular/metabolismo , Humanos , Estresse Mecânico
14.
Nat Rev Cardiol ; 17(8): 457-473, 2020 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32231331

RESUMO

Advances in single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) technologies in the past 10 years have had a transformative effect on biomedical research, enabling the profiling and analysis of the transcriptomes of single cells at unprecedented resolution and throughput. Specifically, scRNA-seq has facilitated the identification of novel or rare cell types, the analysis of single-cell trajectory construction and stem or progenitor cell differentiation, and the comparison of healthy and disease-related tissues at single-cell resolution. These applications have been critical in advances in cardiovascular research in the past decade as evidenced by the generation of cell atlases of mammalian heart and blood vessels and the elucidation of mechanisms involved in cardiovascular development and stem or progenitor cell differentiation. In this Review, we summarize the currently available scRNA-seq technologies and analytical tools and discuss the latest findings using scRNA-seq that have substantially improved our knowledge on the development of the cardiovascular system and the mechanisms underlying cardiovascular diseases. Furthermore, we examine emerging strategies that integrate multimodal single-cell platforms, focusing on future applications in cardiovascular precision medicine that use single-cell omics approaches to characterize cell-specific responses to drugs or environmental stimuli and to develop effective patient-specific therapeutics.


Assuntos
Doenças Cardiovasculares , Perfilação da Expressão Gênica , Análise de Sequência de RNA , Análise de Célula Única , Animais , Doenças Cardiovasculares/diagnóstico , Doenças Cardiovasculares/genética , Doenças Cardiovasculares/metabolismo , Humanos , Camundongos
15.
Dev Cell ; 49(6): 920-935.e5, 2019 06 17.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31105008

RESUMO

Whether cell forces or extracellular matrix (ECM) can impact genome integrity is largely unclear. Here, acute perturbations (∼1 h) to actomyosin stress or ECM elasticity cause rapid and reversible changes in lamin-A, DNA damage, and cell cycle. The findings are especially relevant to organs such as the heart because DNA damage permanently arrests cardiomyocyte proliferation shortly after birth and thereby eliminates regeneration after injury including heart attack. Embryonic hearts, cardiac-differentiated iPS cells (induced pluripotent stem cells), and various nonmuscle cell types all show that actomyosin-driven nuclear rupture causes cytoplasmic mis-localization of DNA repair factors and excess DNA damage. Binucleation and micronuclei increase as telomeres shorten, which all favor cell-cycle arrest. Deficiencies in lamin-A and repair factors exacerbate these effects, but lamin-A-associated defects are rescued by repair factor overexpression and also by contractility modulators in clinical trials. Contractile cells on stiff ECM normally exhibit low phosphorylation and slow degradation of lamin-A by matrix-metalloprotease-2 (MMP2), and inhibition of this lamin-A turnover and also actomyosin contractility are seen to minimize DNA damage. Lamin-A is thus stress stabilized to mechano-protect the genome.


Assuntos
Pontos de Checagem do Ciclo Celular , Núcleo Celular/metabolismo , Dano ao DNA , Coração/embriologia , Lamina Tipo A/metabolismo , Mecanotransdução Celular , Lâmina Nuclear/metabolismo , Animais , Diferenciação Celular , Embrião de Galinha , Galinhas , Reparo do DNA , Matriz Extracelular , Coração/fisiologia , Humanos , Organogênese , Fosforilação
16.
Emerg Top Life Sci ; 2(5): 713-725, 2018 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31693005

RESUMO

Structural links from the nucleus to the cytoskeleton and to the extracellular environment play a role in direct mechanosensing by nuclear factors. Here, we highlight recent studies that illustrate nuclear mechanosensation processes ranging from DNA repair and nuclear protein phospho-modulation to chromatin reorganization, lipase activation by dilation, and reversible rupture with the release of nuclear factors. Recent progresses demonstrate that these mechanosensing processes lead to modulation of gene expression such as those involved in the regulation of cytoskeletal programs and introduce copy number variations. The nuclear lamina protein lamin A has a recurring role, and various biophysical analyses prove helpful in clarifying mechanisms. The various recent observations provide further motivation to understand the regulation of nuclear mechanosensing pathways in both physiological and pathological contexts.

17.
Nucleus ; 9(1): 230-245, 2018 01 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29619860

RESUMO

Interphase phosphorylation of lamin-A,C depends dynamically on a cell's microenvironment, including the stiffness of extracellular matrix. However, phosphorylation dynamics is poorly understood for diseased forms such as progerin, a permanently farnesylated mutant of LMNA that accelerates aging of stiff and mechanically stressed tissues. Here, fine-excision alignment mass spectrometry (FEA-MS) is developed to quantify progerin and its phosphorylation levels in patient iPS cells differentiated to mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs). The stoichiometry of total A-type lamins (including progerin) versus B-type lamins measured for Progeria iPS-MSCs prove similar to that of normal MSCs, with total A-type lamins more abundant than B-type lamins. However, progerin behaves more like farnesylated B-type lamins in mechanically-induced segregation from nuclear blebs. Phosphorylation of progerin at multiple sites in iPS-MSCs cultured on rigid plastic is also lower than that of normal lamin-A and C. Reduction of nuclear tension upon i) cell rounding/detachment from plastic, ii) culture on soft gels, and iii) inhibition of actomyosin stress increases phosphorylation and degradation of lamin-C > lamin-A > progerin. Such mechano-sensitivity diminishes, however, with passage as progerin and DNA damage accumulate. Lastly, transcription-regulating retinoids exert equal effects on both diseased and normal A-type lamins, suggesting a differential mechano-responsiveness might best explain the stiff tissue defects in Progeria.


Assuntos
Células-Tronco Pluripotentes Induzidas/metabolismo , Lamina Tipo A/metabolismo , Mecanotransdução Celular , Células-Tronco Mesenquimais/metabolismo , Actomiosina/farmacologia , Humanos , Células-Tronco Pluripotentes Induzidas/efeitos dos fármacos , Lamina Tipo A/antagonistas & inibidores , Mecanotransdução Celular/efeitos dos fármacos , Células-Tronco Mesenquimais/efeitos dos fármacos , Fosforilação/efeitos dos fármacos
18.
J Cell Biol ; 217(11): 3796-3808, 2018 11 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30171044

RESUMO

The nucleus is physically linked to the cytoskeleton, adhesions, and extracellular matrix-all of which sustain forces, but their relationships to DNA damage are obscure. We show that nuclear rupture with cytoplasmic mislocalization of multiple DNA repair factors correlates with high nuclear curvature imposed by an external probe or by cell attachment to either aligned collagen fibers or stiff matrix. Mislocalization is greatly enhanced by lamin A depletion, requires hours for nuclear reentry, and correlates with an increase in pan-nucleoplasmic foci of the DNA damage marker γH2AX. Excess DNA damage is rescued in ruptured nuclei by cooverexpression of multiple DNA repair factors as well as by soft matrix or inhibition of actomyosin tension. Increased contractility has the opposite effect, and stiff tumors with low lamin A indeed exhibit increased nuclear curvature, more frequent nuclear rupture, and excess DNA damage. Additional stresses likely play a role, but the data suggest high curvature promotes nuclear rupture, which compromises retention of DNA repair factors and favors sustained damage.


Assuntos
Núcleo Celular/metabolismo , Reparo do DNA , Histonas/metabolismo , Lamina Tipo A/metabolismo , Células A549 , Núcleo Celular/genética , Histonas/genética , Humanos , Lamina Tipo A/genética
19.
J Cell Biol ; 216(2): 305-315, 2017 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28043971

RESUMO

The nucleus is linked mechanically to the extracellular matrix via multiple polymers that transmit forces to the nuclear envelope and into the nuclear interior. Here, we review some of the emerging mechanisms of nuclear mechanosensing, which range from changes in protein conformation and transcription factor localization to chromosome reorganization and membrane dilation up to rupture. Nuclear mechanosensing encompasses biophysically complex pathways that often converge on the main structural proteins of the nucleus, the lamins. We also perform meta-analyses of public transcriptomics and proteomics data, which indicate that some of the mechanosensing pathways relaying signals from the collagen matrix to the nucleus apply to a broad range of species, tissues, and diseases.


Assuntos
Núcleo Celular/metabolismo , Mecanotransdução Celular , Proteínas Nucleares/metabolismo , Animais , Montagem e Desmontagem da Cromatina , Biologia Computacional , Bases de Dados Genéticas , Perfilação da Expressão Gênica/métodos , Regulação da Expressão Gênica , Humanos , Modelos Biológicos , Membrana Nuclear/metabolismo , Proteínas Nucleares/genética , Fosforilação , Proteômica/métodos , Estresse Mecânico
20.
Annu Rev Biophys ; 46: 295-315, 2017 05 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28532215

RESUMO

Many of the most important molecules of life are polymers. In animals, the most abundant of the proteinaceous polymers are the collagens, which constitute the fibrous matrix outside cells and which can also self-assemble into gels. The physically measurable stiffness of gels, as well as tissues, increases with the amount of collagen, and cells seem to sense this stiffness. An understanding of this mechanosensing process in complex tissues, including fibrotic disease states with high collagen, is now utilizing 'omics data sets and is revealing polymer physics-type, nonlinear scaling relationships between concentrations of seemingly unrelated biopolymers. The nuclear structure protein lamin A provides one example, with protein and transcript levels increasing with collagen 1 and tissue stiffness, and with mechanisms rooted in protein stabilization induced by cytoskeletal stress. Physics-based models of fibrous matrix, cytoskeletal force dipoles, and the lamin A gene circuit illustrate the wide range of testable predictions emerging for tissues, cell cultures, and even stem cell-based tissue regeneration. Beyond the epigenetics of mechanosensing, the scaling in cancer of chromosome copy number variations and other mutations with tissue stiffness suggests that genomic changes are occurring by mechanogenomic processes that now require elucidation.


Assuntos
Biopolímeros/metabolismo , Núcleo Celular/metabolismo , Neoplasias/metabolismo , Proteoma/metabolismo , Regeneração , Transcriptoma , Animais , Núcleo Celular/genética , Colágeno/fisiologia , Citoesqueleto/metabolismo , Variações do Número de Cópias de DNA , Epigênese Genética , Regulação da Expressão Gênica , Humanos , Mecanotransdução Celular , Neoplasias/genética , Transplante de Células-Tronco
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