Bogdanov, V;Soltisz, A;Beard, C;Hernandez Orengo, B;Sakuta, G;Veeraraghavan, R;Davis, J;Gyorke, S;
| DOI: 10.1016/j.bpj.2022.11.1389
Aberrant Ca-CaM signaling has been implicated in various congenital and acquired cardiac pathologies, including arrhythmia, hypertrophy, and HF. We examined the impact of HF induced by trans-aortic constriction (TAC) on the distribution of the three CaM mRNAs (Calm 1,2 and 3) and their key protein target mRNAs (Ryr2, Scn5a, Camk2d, NOS1 and Cacna1c) in cardiomyocytes, using fluorescence in situ hybridization (RNAScope™). HF resulted in specific changes in the pattern of localization of Calms, manifested in redistribution of Calm3 from the cell periphery towards the perinuclear area and enhanced Calm2 attraction to the perinuclear area compared to sham myocytes. Additionally, HF resulted in redistribution of mRNAs for certain CaM target mRNAs. Particularly, NOS1 localization shifted from the cell periphery towards the perinuclear area, Cacna1c, Camk2d and Scn5a abundance increased at the perinuclear area, and Ryr2 attracted even closer to the cell periphery in HF myocytes compared to sham myocytes. The strength of non-random attraction/repulsion was measured as the maximal deviation between the observed distribution of nearest neighbor distances from the distribution predicted under complete spatial randomness. Consistent with the observed alterations in abundance and distribution of CaM and CaM target mRNAs, HF resulted in increased attraction between Calm1 and Scn5a, Ryr2 and Camk2d, between Calm2 and Ryr2 and Camk2d; and between Calm3 and NOS1 and Scn5a. In contrast, the attraction between Calm3 and Ryr2 decreased in HF myocytes compared to sham. Collectively, these results suggest distribution of Calms and their association with key target protein mRNAs undergo substantial alterations in heart failure. These results have new important implications for organization of Ca signaling in normal and diseased heart.
Sun, Y;Asano, K;Sedes, L;Cantalupo, A;Hansen, J;Iyengar, R;Walsh, MJ;Ramirez, F;
PMID: 37022786 | DOI: 10.1172/jci.insight.168793
To improve our limited understanding of the pathogenesis of thoracic aortic aneurysm (TAA) leading to acute aortic dissection, single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) was employed to profile disease-relevant transcriptomic changes of aortic cell populations in a well-characterized mouse model of the most commonly diagnosed form of Marfan syndrome (MFS). As result, two discrete sub-populations of aortic cells (SMC3 and EC4) were identified only in the aorta of Fbn1mgR/mgR mice. SMC3 highly express genes related to extracellular matrix formation and nitric oxide signaling, whereas EC4 transcriptional profile is enriched in SMC, fibroblast, and immune cell-related genes. Trajectory analysis predicted close phenotypic modulation between SMC3 and EC4, which were therefore analyzed together as a discrete MFS-modulated (MFSmod) sub-population. In situ hybridizations of diagnostic transcripts located MFSmod cells to the intima of Fbn1mgR/mgR aortas. Reference-based dataset integration revealed transcriptomic similarity between MFSmod and an SMC-derived cell cluster modulated in human TAA. Consistent with angiotensin II type I receptor (At1r) contribution to TAA development, MFSmod cells were absent in the aorta of Fbn1mgR/mgR mice treated with the At1r antagonist losartan. Altogether, our findings indicate that a discrete dynamic alteration of aortic cell identity is associated with dissecting TAA in MFS mice and increased risk of aortic dissection in MFS patients.
Medvedev, R;Turner, D;Gorelik, J;Alvarado, F;Bondarenko, V;Glukhov, A;
| DOI: 10.1016/j.bpj.2022.11.1392
Atrial fibrillation (AF) is commonly observed in patients with hypertension and is associated with pathologically elevated cardiomyocyte stretch. AF triggers have been linked to subcellular Ca2+ abnormalities, while their association with stretch remains elusive. Caveolae are mechanosensitive membrane structures, that play a role in both Ca2+ and cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) signaling. Therefore, caveolae could provide a mechanistic connection between cardiomyocyte stretch, Ca2+ mishandling, and AF. In isolated mouse atrial myocytes, cell stretch was mimicked by hypotonic swelling, which increased cell width (by ∼30%, p
Worssam, MD;Lambert, J;Oc, S;Taylor, JC;Taylor, AL;Dobnikar, L;Chappell, J;Harman, JL;Figg, NL;Finigan, A;Foote, K;Uryga, AK;Bennett, MR;Spivakov, M;Jørgensen, HF;
PMID: 35994249 | DOI: 10.1093/cvr/cvac138
Quiescent, differentiated adult vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) can be induced to proliferate and switch phenotype. Such plasticity underlies blood vessel homeostasis and contributes to vascular disease development. Oligoclonal VSMC contribution is a hallmark of end-stage vascular disease. Here we aim to understand cellular mechanisms underpinning generation of this VSMC oligoclonality.We investigate the dynamics of VSMC clone formation using confocal microscopy and single cell transcriptomics in VSMC-lineage-traced animal models. We find that activation of medial VSMC proliferation occurs at low frequency after vascular injury and that only a subset of expanding clones migrate, which together drives formation of oligoclonal neointimal lesions. VSMC contribution in small atherosclerotic lesions is typically from one or two clones, similar to observations in mature lesions. Low frequency (<0.1%) of clonal VSMC proliferation is also observed in vitro. Single-cell RNA-sequencing revealed progressive cell state changes across a contiguous VSMC population at onset of injury-induced proliferation. Proliferating VSMCs mapped selectively to one of two distinct trajectories and were associated with cells showing extensive phenotypic switching. A proliferation-associated transitory state shared pronounced similarities with atypical SCA1+ VSMCs from uninjured mouse arteries and VSMCs in healthy human aorta. We show functionally that clonal expansion of SCA1+ VSMCs from healthy arteries occurs at higher rate and frequency compared to SCA1- cells.Our data suggest that activation of proliferation at low frequency is a general, cell-intrinsic feature of VSMCs. We show that rare VSMCs in healthy arteries display VSMC phenotypic switching akin to that observed in pathological vessel remodelling and that this is a conserved feature of mouse and human healthy arteries. The increased proliferation of modulated VSMCs from healthy arteries suggests that these cells respond more readily to disease-inducing cues and could drive oligoclonal VSMC expansion.