Stem Cell Cytoskeletal Responses to Pulsatile Flow in Heart Valve Tissue Engineering Studies

Heart valve replacement options remain exceedingly limited for pediatric patients because they cannot accommodate somatic growth. To overcome this shortcoming, heart valve tissue engineering using human bone marrow stem cells (HBMSCs) has been considered a potential solution to the treatment of crit...

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Main Authors: Glenda Castellanos, Sana Nasim, Denise M. Almora, Sasmita Rath, Sharan Ramaswamy
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2018-06-01
Series:Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fcvm.2018.00058/full
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spelling doaj-166a040fb2964ae082e3d903244ad2bc2020-11-24T21:41:31ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine2297-055X2018-06-01510.3389/fcvm.2018.00058345730Stem Cell Cytoskeletal Responses to Pulsatile Flow in Heart Valve Tissue Engineering StudiesGlenda CastellanosSana NasimDenise M. AlmoraSasmita RathSharan RamaswamyHeart valve replacement options remain exceedingly limited for pediatric patients because they cannot accommodate somatic growth. To overcome this shortcoming, heart valve tissue engineering using human bone marrow stem cells (HBMSCs) has been considered a potential solution to the treatment of critical congenital valvular defects. The mechanical environments during in vitro culture are key regulators of progenitor cell fate. Here, we report on alterations in HBMSCs, specifically in their actin cytoskeleton and their nucleus under fluid-induced shear stresses of relevance to heart valves. HBMSCs were seeded in microfluidic channels and were exposed to the following conditions: pulsatile shear stress (PSS), steady shear stress (SS), and no flow controls (n = 4/group). Changes to the actin filament structure were monitored and subsequent gene expression was evaluated. A significant increase (p < 0.05) in the number of actin filaments, filament density and angle (between 30° and 84°), and conversely a significant decrease (p < 0.05) in the length of the filaments were observed when the HBMSCs were exposed to PSS for 48 h compared to SS and no flow conditions. No significant differences in nuclear shape were observed among the groups (p > 0.05). Of particular relevance to valvulogenesis, klf2a, a critical gene in valve development, was significantly expressed only by the PSS group (p < 0.05). We conclude that HBMSCs respond to PSS by alterations to their actin filament structure that are distinct from SS and no flow conditions. These changes coupled with the subsequent gene expression findings suggest that at the cellular level, the immediate effect of PSS is to initiate a unique set of quantifiable cytoskeletal events (increased actin filament number, density and angle, but decrease in filament length) in stem cells, which could be useful in the fine-tuning of in vitro protocols in heart valve tissue engineering.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fcvm.2018.00058/fullpulsatile shear stressHBMSCsactin filamentscytoskeletonnucleartissue engineering
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Glenda Castellanos
Sana Nasim
Denise M. Almora
Sasmita Rath
Sharan Ramaswamy
spellingShingle Glenda Castellanos
Sana Nasim
Denise M. Almora
Sasmita Rath
Sharan Ramaswamy
Stem Cell Cytoskeletal Responses to Pulsatile Flow in Heart Valve Tissue Engineering Studies
Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine
pulsatile shear stress
HBMSCs
actin filaments
cytoskeleton
nuclear
tissue engineering
author_facet Glenda Castellanos
Sana Nasim
Denise M. Almora
Sasmita Rath
Sharan Ramaswamy
author_sort Glenda Castellanos
title Stem Cell Cytoskeletal Responses to Pulsatile Flow in Heart Valve Tissue Engineering Studies
title_short Stem Cell Cytoskeletal Responses to Pulsatile Flow in Heart Valve Tissue Engineering Studies
title_full Stem Cell Cytoskeletal Responses to Pulsatile Flow in Heart Valve Tissue Engineering Studies
title_fullStr Stem Cell Cytoskeletal Responses to Pulsatile Flow in Heart Valve Tissue Engineering Studies
title_full_unstemmed Stem Cell Cytoskeletal Responses to Pulsatile Flow in Heart Valve Tissue Engineering Studies
title_sort stem cell cytoskeletal responses to pulsatile flow in heart valve tissue engineering studies
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine
issn 2297-055X
publishDate 2018-06-01
description Heart valve replacement options remain exceedingly limited for pediatric patients because they cannot accommodate somatic growth. To overcome this shortcoming, heart valve tissue engineering using human bone marrow stem cells (HBMSCs) has been considered a potential solution to the treatment of critical congenital valvular defects. The mechanical environments during in vitro culture are key regulators of progenitor cell fate. Here, we report on alterations in HBMSCs, specifically in their actin cytoskeleton and their nucleus under fluid-induced shear stresses of relevance to heart valves. HBMSCs were seeded in microfluidic channels and were exposed to the following conditions: pulsatile shear stress (PSS), steady shear stress (SS), and no flow controls (n = 4/group). Changes to the actin filament structure were monitored and subsequent gene expression was evaluated. A significant increase (p < 0.05) in the number of actin filaments, filament density and angle (between 30° and 84°), and conversely a significant decrease (p < 0.05) in the length of the filaments were observed when the HBMSCs were exposed to PSS for 48 h compared to SS and no flow conditions. No significant differences in nuclear shape were observed among the groups (p > 0.05). Of particular relevance to valvulogenesis, klf2a, a critical gene in valve development, was significantly expressed only by the PSS group (p < 0.05). We conclude that HBMSCs respond to PSS by alterations to their actin filament structure that are distinct from SS and no flow conditions. These changes coupled with the subsequent gene expression findings suggest that at the cellular level, the immediate effect of PSS is to initiate a unique set of quantifiable cytoskeletal events (increased actin filament number, density and angle, but decrease in filament length) in stem cells, which could be useful in the fine-tuning of in vitro protocols in heart valve tissue engineering.
topic pulsatile shear stress
HBMSCs
actin filaments
cytoskeleton
nuclear
tissue engineering
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fcvm.2018.00058/full
work_keys_str_mv AT glendacastellanos stemcellcytoskeletalresponsestopulsatileflowinheartvalvetissueengineeringstudies
AT sananasim stemcellcytoskeletalresponsestopulsatileflowinheartvalvetissueengineeringstudies
AT denisemalmora stemcellcytoskeletalresponsestopulsatileflowinheartvalvetissueengineeringstudies
AT sasmitarath stemcellcytoskeletalresponsestopulsatileflowinheartvalvetissueengineeringstudies
AT sharanramaswamy stemcellcytoskeletalresponsestopulsatileflowinheartvalvetissueengineeringstudies
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