Cristiane Miranda França,Maria Elisa Quezado Lima Verde,Alice Corrêa Silva‐Sousa,Amin Mansoorifar,Avathamsa Athirasala,Ramesh Subbiah,Anthony Tahayeri,Maurício Gonçalves da Costa Sousa,May Anny Alves Fraga,Rahul Madathiparambil Visalakshan,Aaron Doe,Keith Beadle,McKenna Finley,Emilios K. Dimitriadis,Jennifer Bays,Marina Uroz,Kenneth M. Yamada,Christopher S. Chen,Luiz E. Bertassoni
出处
期刊:Science Advances [American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)] 日期:2025-01-10卷期号:11 (2)
A hallmark of chronic and inflammatory diseases is the formation of a fibrotic and stiff extracellular matrix (ECM), typically associated with abnormal, leaky microvascular capillaries. Mechanisms explaining how the microvasculature responds to ECM alterations remain unknown. Here, we used a microphysiological model of capillaries on a chip mimicking the characteristics of healthy or fibrotic collagen to test the hypothesis that perivascular cells mediate the response of vascular capillaries to mechanical and structural changes in the human ECM. Capillaries engineered in altered fibrotic collagen had abnormal migration of perivascular cells, reduced pericyte differentiation, increased leakage, and higher regulation of inflammatory/remodeling genes, all regulated via NOTCH3 , a known mediator of endothelial-perivascular cell communication. Capillaries engineered either with endothelial cells alone or with perivascular cells silenced for NOTCH3 expression showed a minimal response to ECM alterations. These findings reveal a previously unknown mechanism of vascular response to changes in the ECM in health and disease.