Biomechanical and transcriptional evidence that smooth muscle cell death drives an osteochondrogenic phenotype and severe proximal vascular disease in progeria.
Sae-Il MurtadaYuki KawamuraCristina CavinatoMolly WangAbhay B RamachandraBart SpronckDavid S LiGeorge TellidesJay D HumphreyPublished in: Biomechanics and modeling in mechanobiology (2023)
Hutchinson-Gilford Progeria Syndrome results in rapid aging and severe cardiovascular sequelae that accelerate near end-of-life. We found a progressive disease process in proximal elastic arteries that was less evident in distal muscular arteries. Changes in aortic structure and function were then associated with changes in transcriptomics assessed via both bulk and single cell RNA sequencing, which suggested a novel sequence of progressive aortic disease: adverse extracellular matrix remodeling followed by mechanical stress-induced smooth muscle cell death, leading a subset of remnant smooth muscle cells to an osteochondrogenic phenotype that results in an accumulation of proteoglycans that thickens the aortic wall and increases pulse wave velocity, with late calcification exacerbating these effects. Increased central artery pulse wave velocity is known to drive left ventricular diastolic dysfunction, the primary diagnosis in progeria children. It appears that mechanical stresses above ~ 80 kPa initiate this progressive aortic disease process, explaining why elastic lamellar structures that are organized early in development under low wall stresses appear to be nearly normal whereas other medial constituents worsen progressively in adulthood. Mitigating early mechanical stress-driven smooth muscle cell loss/phenotypic modulation promises to have important cardiovascular implications in progeria patients.
Keyphrases
- smooth muscle
- left ventricular
- single cell
- cell death
- stress induced
- aortic valve
- extracellular matrix
- multiple sclerosis
- end stage renal disease
- chronic kidney disease
- rna seq
- blood pressure
- pulmonary artery
- ejection fraction
- blood flow
- high throughput
- heart failure
- hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
- aortic dissection
- case report
- signaling pathway
- aortic stenosis
- stem cells
- cardiac resynchronization therapy
- newly diagnosed
- mitral valve
- emergency department
- atrial fibrillation
- prognostic factors
- amino acid
- quantum dots
- acute coronary syndrome
- heat stress
- early life
- pi k akt
- adverse drug