AI Article Synopsis

  • Aging significantly impacts microvascular function and disease, but the mechanisms behind this are still not fully understood.
  • Researchers are exploring how changes in collagen stiffness with age affect the behavior of endothelial cells (ECs) using innovative 3D culture models that replicate these age-related changes.
  • A special hydrogel model allows scientists to gradually stiffen the environment of vascular networks derived from stem cells, revealing that increased stiffness leads to EC contractility changes and disruption of critical cell adhesion proteins, which can potentially be mitigated by inhibiting cell contractility.

Article Abstract

Aging is a major risk factor in microvascular dysfunction and disease development, but the underlying mechanism remains largely unknown. As a result, age-mediated changes in the mechanical properties of tissue collagen have gained interest as drivers of endothelial cell (EC) dysfunction. 3D culture models that mimic age-mediated changes in the microvasculature can facilitate mechanistic understanding. A fibrillar hydrogel capable of changing its stiffness after forming microvascular networks is established. This hydrogel model is used to form vascular networks from induced pluripotent stem cells under soft conditions that mimic young tissue mechanics. Then matrix stiffness is gradually increased, thus exposing the vascular networks to the aging-mimicry process in vitro. It is found that upon dynamic matrix stiffening, EC contractility is increased, resulting in the activation of focal adhesion kinase and subsequent dissociation of β-catenin from VE-Cadherin mediated adherens junctions, leading to the abruption of the vascular networks. Inhibiting cell contractility impedes the dissociation of β-catenin, thereby preventing the deconstruction of adherens junctions, thus partially rescuing the age-mediated vascular phenotype. The findings provide the first direct evidence of matrix's dynamic mechano-changes in compromising microvasculature with aging and highlight the importance of hydrogel systems to study tissue-level changes with aging in basic and translational studies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9353494PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/advs.202201483DOI Listing

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