1. Introduction
Blood vessels dynamically respond to local hemodynamic forces and signalling molecules to control organ perfusion and blood pressure. While vasomotor tone is determined by the contractile state of vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) and reflects acute adaptations of the vessel diameter to changes in (blood) pressure and vasoactive mediators, the response to chronic hemodynamic stress is very complex and involves structural adaptations of the blood vessels. VSMCs possess a high degree of cellular plasticity that allows them to alter their phenotype in response to extracellular signals and cues, including chronic increases in blood pressure, to maintain vascular homeostasis [
1]. Under physiological conditions, VSMCs exhibit a differentiated contractile phenotype characterized by a low rate of proliferation [
2]. Upon vascular injury, in atherosclerosis or hypertension, VSMCs re-enter the cell cycle and become dedifferentiated, assuming a “synthetic” phenotype with enhanced proliferation and migration as well as an increased synthesis of extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins [
1]. This activated phenotype is associated with the increased expression of remodelling-associated signalling molecules, including cell cycle regulators, mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPK) and matrix metalloproteinases (MMP) as well as a reduction in VSMC-specific markers, including calponin, smooth muscle-myosin heavy chain (SM-MHC) and α-smooth muscle actin (α-SMA) [
3]. This plasticity of VSMCs allows the blood vessels to structurally adapt; however, if the healing process fails to resolve appropriately, it can drive cardiovascular pathologies, including hypertension, atherosclerosis, intimal hyperplasia, restenosis and aneurysm formation [
3,
4]. Therefore, a better understanding of the pivotal mechanisms by which VSMCs sense and integrate the mechanical cues from the ECM that initiate their phenotypic dedifferentiation and reinforce maladaptive remodelling processes could benefit the development of new treatment strategies for vascular diseases.
VSMC–ECM interactions are mediated by focal adhesions (FAs), the main cellular network for mechanotransduction at which multiple proteins, the ECM, integrins and cytoskeletal proteins interact [
5]. Each VSMC possesses multiple FAs, providing a basis for the mechanical properties of blood vessels because they play a crucial role in regulating the intrinsic tone and stiffness of the VSMCs. About 100 proteins have been shown to be associated with FAs, and among those, LIM-domain containing proteins exhibit a highly conserved mechanism in transducing mechanical signals from the cytoskeleton to other cellular compartments including the nucleus [
6,
7]. Zyxin is an important LIM-domain protein acting as a mechanotransducer most notably in endothelial cells in which it regulates the expression of many mechanosensitive genes [
8,
9]. In VSMCs, it is also involved in the biomechanical response to force [
10].
LPP is structurally the closest relative to zyxin, sharing about 41% of its protein sequence homology. Like zyxin, it is associated with FAs, binds actin stress fibres and possesses transactivation capacity in the nucleus [
11]. LPP competes with zyxin for the same binding site at filamentous α-actin and plays a regulatory role in cytoskeletal organization, cell adhesion and migration during vascular injury [
12,
13]. In vitro studies indicate that LPP may be able to compensate for the loss of zyxin in VSMCs, thereby maintaining the quiescent contractile phenotype by supporting the expression of smooth-muscle-specific genes [
14]. LPP is highly enriched in the medial layer of arterial blood vessels and considered a smooth-muscle-cell-specific gene based on in vivo expression studies [
12]. Given its emerging role as an important regulator of VSMC architecture, adhesion and migration, we investigated the intriguing hypothesis that LPP is an important mechanotransducer in VSMCs of both conduit and resistance-sized arteries. We show that unlike zyxin, LPP is highly enriched in the medial layer of arteries but not in the endothelium. Our data indicate that both LIM-domain proteins stabilize the quiescent contractile phenotype of VSMCs in vitro. Interestingly, only the lack of LPP in arteries produces a vascular phenotype characterized by an attenuated myogenic response to increased intravascular pressure.
2. Methods
2.1. Isolation of VSMCs from Mouse Aorta
Cryopreserved heterozygous LPP knockout (LPP-KO) embryos on a mixed 129/SvJ-C57BL/6J background were kindly provided by Professor Wim Van de Ven at the Department of Human Genetics, KU Leuven, Belgium. They were transferred to pseudopregnant C57BL6/J foster mothers, and the resulting offspring were backcrossed onto the C57BL6/J background at least ten times. Wildtype (WT) mice referred to herein represent littermates derived from the breeding of heterozygous LPP-KO mice.
For preparing VSMCs from these mice, the descending aorta starting at the outlet of the right renal artery was dissected and washed twice in calcium-free Dulbecco’s PBS. The aorta was then briefly (15 min) pre-digested in collagenase II-containing DMEM (1 mg/mL, Worthington Biochemical, Lakewood, NJ, USA) to easily peel off the adventitial layer. Subsequently, the aorta was cut in 1 mm rings and digested in collagenase II (1 mg/mL) and elastase (0.15 mg/mL) for approximately 3 h, followed by cell dispersion. VSMCs were cultured in DMEM supplemented with 15% foetal bovine serum (FBS) plus penicillin/streptomycin and fungizone at 37 °C with 5% CO2. Cells in passages 3–5 were used in experiments.
2.2. Immunocytochemistry
Cells were fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde (PFA) and blocked with casein solution (0.25% casein, 0.1% BSA, 15 mmol/L NaN3 and 50 mmol/L Tris at a pH of 7.6). After fixation, cells were incubated at ambient temperature with primary antibodies at the following concentrations (rabbit anti-zyxin, HPA004835, rabbit anti-LPP, HPA017342; both diluted at a ratio of 1:75) and incubated overnight at 4 °C. Alpha-smooth muscle actin (α-SMA, F3777) staining was performed at a dilution of 1:200. After rinsing, cells were incubated with secondary antibodies for 2 h at ambient temperature followed by 10 min with 4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) (Invitrogen via Thermo Fisher Scientific, Karlsruhe, Germany) in PBS to counterstain the nuclei and then mounted in Mowiol (Calbiochem via Merck-Millipore, Darmstadt, Germany).
For staining of the blood vessels, femoral and MA segments were fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde, dehydrated, embedded in paraffin and cut into 3 μm thick sections. Antigens were retrieved by incubating re-hydrated tissue sections with citrate buffer (pH 6.0) at 100 °C for 15 min. The sections were then incubated with blocking solution and the same procedure as for immunostaining of the cells was applied. For confocal microscopy, an IX81 microscope equipped with an IX-DSU disk unit and the MT20 multi-wavelength illumination system was used in combination with the cellSens software package (version 1.12, Olympus Deutschland, Hamburg, Germany).
2.3. Application of Cyclic Stretch
An FX-5000 tension system (Flexcell via Dunn Labortechnik, Asbach, Germany) was used to subject the cells to 13% cell elongation at 0.5 Hz. The cells were exposed to cyclic stretch for 1, 8 or 24 h to study the dynamics of LPP distribution in response to biomechanical stretch.
2.4. Cell Proliferation Assay
Proliferation was determined by counting the cells at two different time points, at the beginning after seeding and 72 h after seeding. Briefly, mouse VSMCs were seeded into 6-well plates at a density of 20,000 cells/well. After 6 h, cells in one plate were fixed with 4% PFA to determine the number of cells at the starting point (t = 0). The remaining cells seeded on the second plate were further grown and fixed after 72 h (t = 72 h). The fixed cells were stained with DAPI, 6 random images of the individual wells were analysed by counting the cells per field of view and the proliferation rate was determined.
Cells grown in 3D spheroids were also used to analyse the rate of proliferation. To this end, the spheroids (see below) were embedded in paraffin, and 5 µm thick sections were prepared and stained for the proliferation marker Ki67.
2.5. Generation of 3D Spheroids
Murine aortic VSMCs were detached with trypsin, centrifuged at 1000 rpm for 5 min and counted by using an automated cell counter (CASY, OMNI Life Science, Bremen, Germany). For each spheroid, droplets of 25 µL containing 500 cells in culture medium with 0.24% (w/v) methyl cellulose (Sigma-Aldrich/Merck, Darmstadt, Germany) plus 15% (v/v) FBS were pipetted onto squared petri dishes (approximately 100 spheroids per dish) that were placed upside down in the incubator to generate hanging drops and cultivated for 24 h.
For the collagen gel invasion assay, the spheroids were resuspended into collagen matrices. A total of 4.5 mL acidic collagen extract of rat tails was mixed with 500 µL of 10× M199 medium (M0605, Sigma-Aldrich) and quickly titrated with 0.2 M NaOH to neutralize the solution. The spheroids were quickly resuspended into the collagen solution, and the resultant mixture was pipetted into pre-warmed 24-well plates (0.5 mL spheroid/collagen gel suspension pro well). After collagen gel polymerization, 100 μL of DMEM medium (containing 15% FBS) was added on top of the gel surface.
As previously described [
15], the spheroid angiogenesis assay was used to measure the invasion of VSMC spheroids into the collagen gel. The images of the spheroids were taken after 24 h at 10× magnification, and the cumulative length and number of sprouts originating from individual spheroids were measured. Analysis was performed using the cellSens Dimension software (version 1.9, Olympus).
For the
spheroid contraction assay, spheroids were also generated by the hanging drop method as described above and harvested in cell culture medium with 15% FCS, but they were plated on top of the collagen gel matrices, employing a recently established protocol [
16]. Briefly, for the preparation of collagen gels, all ingredients were held on ice. Collagen gel stock solution (4.5 mL with 2 mg/mL type I collagen) was carefully mixed with 500 µL of 10× M199 and quickly neutralized by adding approximately 175 µL sterile NaOH (0.2 M, solution turning from yellow to light pink) to facilitate the polymerization of the collagen gel. Subsequently, the same volume (5 mL) of DMEM with 15% FBS was added, thoroughly mixed and quickly pipetted at a volume of 0.5 mL into the wells of a 24-well plate. The plates containing the gels were placed into an incubator to enhance gel polymerization. Then, the harvested spheroids were plated at a density of 15–20 spheroids per well.
2.6. Gelatinase Assay
MMP activity was measured in the slices from the 3D spheroids by using the DQ-gelatine assay (Thermo Fisher Scientific). The zinc-fixed paraffin-embedded sections were incubated with 100 µM DQ gelatine in the reaction buffer at 37 °C for 2 h. Nuclei were counterstained with DAPI. Sections were examined by fluorescence microscopy.
2.7. Transfection of Cells
As published previously [
14], the zyxin expression plasmid was constructed by subcloning a full-length polymerase chain reaction fragment (PCR) including the first stop codon (position 305 to 1999; NM 011777) derived from VSMC cDNA into the cDNA 6.2/N-EmGFP TOPO 5.9-kb vector using the TOPO cloning reaction according to the manufacturer’s instructions (TOPO Mammalian Expression Vector Kit, Invitrogen). The same principle was applied for the LPP expression plasmid that encompassed the full-length PCR fragment with the first stop codon (position 551 to 2392, NM 178665.5). A GFP-expressing construct (Lonza Bioscience via Biozym Scientific, Hessisch Oldendorf, Germany) was used as a control for all transient transfection experiments. Nucleofector
TM technology (Lonza Bioscience) was used for transient transfection of the expression plasmids into the cultured VSMCs according to the manufacturer’s instructions. The transgenic expression of LPP and zyxin was confirmed by immunofluorescence and Western blot analyses. Cells were analysed 48 h post transfection.
2.8. Vascular Myography
All animal studies were performed with permission of the Regional Council Karlsruhe and in conformance with the Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals published by the US National Institutes of Health (NIH publication No. 85-23, revised 1996). After sacrificing the mice by cervical dislocation, the mesenteric arcade was removed from the mice and placed into physiological salt solution (PSS) with the following composition (in mM): 140 NaCl, 5 KCl, 1.8 CaCl2, 1 MgCl2, 10 HEPES and 10 glucose at a pH of 7.4. MAs of 3rd or 4th order were carefully cleaned from fat and surrounding connective tissue followed by mounting of the vessels on glass micropipettes in the chamber of the myograph (DMT 110P). Vessels were equilibrated at 37 °C while superfused with PSS. After equilibration, the response to 10 μM phenylephrine (PE) was tested. Only vessels responding with >30% constriction to PE and showing a development of myogenic tone at 80 mm Hg were used in further measurements. To assess the myogenic reactivity of the vessels, with starting intravascular pressure of 20 mm Hg, pressure was gradually increased in 20 mm Hg steps. MA started to respond with myogenic constriction at 60–80 mm Hg. Pressure was increased only when the vascular diameter was stable, usually every 10 min until a final pressure of 160 mm Hg was reached. The same pressure–response curve was then performed in Ca2+-free buffer in the presence of EGTA to obtain the values for the passive pressure diameter curve. Myogenic tone was then calculated as follows: myogenic tone (%) = (passive diameter − active diameter/passive diameter) × 100. Concentration–response curves to agonists were performed at an intravascular pressure of 80 mm Hg in a cumulative manner. Distensibility of the MA segments (distention index) was expressed as the ratio of the diameter at 120 mm Hg to the diameter at 20 mm Hg.
2.9. Statistical Analysis
Data were analysed by GraphPad Prism version 10.0.2 (GraphaPad Software) and the results are represented as mean ± SD of individual experiments with VSMCs isolated from individual mice. In the spheroid contraction assay, more than 5 technical replicates were included to calculate the means of the contractile/dilatory responses for each treatment group including more than 4 individual preparations. For the analysis of differences between two experimental groups, unpaired Student’s t-test was used for which p ˂ 0.05 was considered statistically significant. For the analysis of differences between three or more experimental groups, one-way analysis of variance followed by Šídák’s multiple comparisons test for selected pairs of groups were used. Data from the vascular experiments are presented as mean ± SEM of n samples, i.e., vessel segments isolated from individual mice. For the dose–response curves, EC50 and Emax were calculated from individual experiments. The area under the curve (AUC) was calculated for the individual pressure–response curves. Differences between two individual groups as well as between three or more individual groups were analysed as described above with p < 0.05 considered statistically significant.
4. Discussion
The adaptations of VSMCs to biomechanical stress require the systemic coordination of mechanosensors and their downstream signalling pathways. Previous studies have established LPP as an SMC-specific protein that localizes to FAs in which it is involved in the regulation of cell signalling, actin cytoskeleton organisation and cell migration [
12,
13,
25]. These critical features prompted us to propose that LPP is an important coordinator of the cellular response to biomechanical stress in VSMCs.
To our knowledge, this is the first study describing the phenotype of VSMCs that lack a functional LPP protein. It reveals that these cells proliferate faster than their wildtype counterparts, and in a 3D environment, they also exhibit a greater degree of directed migration, suggesting that LPP plays a role in the phenotypic regulation of VSMCs by promoting the expression of genes and pathways associated with the quiescent contractile phenotype. In response to stretching, LPP redistributed towards stress fibres and the nucleus. This finding is in accordance with previous studies showing the ability of LPP to shuttle to the nucleus and enable activation of transcription [
11].
Based on our studies, LPP in VSMCs may play a similar role as a mechanotransducer as its nearest relative zyxin, which in endothelial cells, rapidly translocates to the nucleus, acting as a mechanosensitive transcription factor [
8]. In human and murine cultured VSMCs, zyxin promotes their quiescent contractile phenotype via the activation of the RhoA-myocardin-related transcription factor/serum response factor (MRTF/SRF) axis. The role of zyxin in VSMC phenotypic regulation is further reinforced by data showing that zyxin-deficient VSMCs in vitro proliferate and migrate faster [
14]. Moreover, the overexpression of LPP in zyxin-deficient VSMCs reverts their activated synthetic phenotype to the quiescent contractile state [
14]. This corresponds to our current observation: the overexpression of zyxin in the LPP-deficient VSMCs compensated for the lack of LPP by completely reverting their growth-promoting and pro-migratory phenotype. While LPP shares only 41% of its amino acid sequence identity with zyxin [
11], both proteins harbour highly conserved domains, including a proline-rich N-terminal sequence with a nuclear export signal, VASP and α-actinin binding sites to interact both with the FAs and the cortical actin cytoskeleton. In addition, LPP and zyxin share three LIM domains within the C-terminal region that likely account for their ability to compensate for one another. This may also hold true for their mutual activation of the RhoA-MRTF-A/SRF axis that promotes, e.g., the expression of gene products, which are widely regarded as essential to maintain the quiescent contractile VSMC phenotype [
26]. In this context, our spheroid contraction assay also shows that LPP-deficient spheroids respond with attenuated contraction to potassium chloride, pointing to the contractile deficit of these cells.
It has been established that cytoskeletal reorganization and actin dynamics directly affect MRTF-A/SRF signalling in myocytes [
27]. The equilibrium between globular G actin and polymerized F actin determines not only the contractile state of the muscle cell and its motility, but also the expression of SRF-dependent genes. Thus, the higher concentration of G actin prevents MRTF-A translocation to the nucleus and the subsequent transcription of SRF-dependent genes supporting the contractile phenotype [
28]. This effect of the actin cytoskeleton’s dynamics on the VSMC phenotype has also been demonstrated in vivo, in which the inhibition of stress fibre assembly by Rho A kinase inhibition prevents the proper differentiation of VSMCs and blood vessel formation due to the inhibition of the expression of SRF-dependent genes [
29]. Since LPP interacts with VASP and α-actinin at the FAs thereby affecting actin polymerization dynamics, it may directly regulate MRTF-A localization and its targeting to the nucleus. This would explain why the lack of LPP in VSMCs not only diminishes the dynamic range of actin polymerization, resulting in an attenuated contraction/dilation of the LPP-deficient VSMC spheroids that we have observed, but also supports the growth-promoting and pro-migratory behaviour of these cells through its presumably indirect effect on VSMC-specific mechanosensitive gene expression.
The finding that LPP can be detected only in the media but not in the endothelium of isolated blood vessels from adult mice strongly supports the VSMC-specific role of LPP. Further, RNA sequencing data on brain and lung vasculature suggest that there is also a differential expression of LPP along the vascular tree (arterial VSMCs > arteriolar VSMCs > venous VSMCs,
http://betsholtzlab.org/VascularSingleCells/database.html (accessed on 8 February 2023)). In this context, it is interesting to note that the contractile response to increases in perfusion pressure is attenuated in resistance-sized arteries isolated from LPP-deficient mice with increasing age while their contractile capacity for phenylephrine, potassium chloride (i.e., depolarisation) or ET-1 remains unchanged. Since LPP is highly abundant at FAs, one explanation for our results could be that the absence of LPP slows down the kinetics by which the increase in wall tension/stretching is transduced to the actin cytoskeleton and beyond.
LPP-KO mouse mesenteric artery exhibited an attenuated passive distention capacity that could also contribute to their lower myogenic responses because the relative constriction becomes greater with the increased diameter at baseline. In addition to structural changes in the ECM in the arterial vessel wall, studies indicate that chronic changes in the biomechanical properties of VSMCs, such as alterations in actin dynamics, lead to the stiffening of the VSMCs themselves, thereby affecting the biomechanical properties of the blood vessel, too [
30]. Interestingly, only the mesenteric artery segments isolated from aged LPP-KO mice exhibited an impaired myogenic response. While there is some evidence that advanced age leads to an attenuated myogenic responsive in small arteries and arterioles of the mesentery [
31], many studies demonstrate this effect of aging also in other vascular beds (as summarized in [
32]). Accordingly, our data suggest that LPP as an important regulator of actin dynamics helps properly organize the actin cytoskeleton and maintain the phenotype of the medial VSMCs, thereby sustaining the elastic properties of the blood vessel wall.
In addition, we considered other potential mechanisms contributing to the attenuated myogenic tone in the MA segments isolated from LPP-deficient mice. In view of the increased MMP activity in the cultured LPP-deficient VSMCs, we hypothesized that this could influence the functional response of the isolated mesenteric artery segments. While the multiple roles of matrix metalloproteinases, including the remodelling of the ECM, VSMC proliferation, migration and differentiation have been well recognized [
33], they also exhibit acute effects by inhibiting calcium entry pathways and vasoconstriction [
34,
35]. In our study, the general MMP inhibitor GM6001 enhanced the myogenic response of mesenteric artery segments isolated from LPP-KO but not WT mice, suggesting that the increase in MMP activity in the VSMCs of these blood vessels mitigates the myogenic response, possibly through the inhibition of calcium influx as previously reported [
34,
35]. Thus, the activated synthetic phenotype of the LPP-KO VSMCs may affect the vasomotor tone not only by altering the structural characteristics of these blood vessels, but also more acutely by modifying their processing and/or release of vasoactive mediators.
Moreover, our finding that the myogenic response of MA segments isolated from mice made hypertensive (by using the DOCA-salt model) is largely mediated by the non-selective cation channel TRPC3 is in agreement with previous studies showing that both the expression and function of this cation channel is increased in VSMCs isolated from the mesenteric vascular bed of spontaneously hypertensive mice [
36]. TRPC3 and TRPC 6, which can form both homo- and heterotetrameric complexes, are known to mediate stretch-induced cation influx into VSMCs, causing their depolarization followed by the activation of voltage-dependent LTCC, influx of extracellular calcium and subsequent constriction [
37]. While Pyr3 was first described as a selective blocker of TRPC3 [
24], there are reports that it can also inhibit TRPC6-dependent cation influx as well as cation currents carried by TRPC3/TRPC6 heterotetramers [
36]. Our finding that Pyr3 differentially blocked the myogenic response of the MA segments isolated from hypertensive WT and LPP-KO mice points to possible differences in composition of the TRPC channels involved.
Even though our in vitro studies suggest that LPP-KO VSMCs proliferate and migrate faster than their WT counterparts, we did not observe any signs of hypertrophy (or hyperplasia) in the conduit or resistance-sized arteries isolated from the LPP-KO mice. Because VSMCs in culture start to dedifferentiate within a few days after isolation [
1], it is likely that in the absence of LPP, which promotes proper cytoskeletal reorganization and actin dynamics as well as the expression of genes encoding contractile proteins, the process of dedifferentiation is accelerated or intensified.
Of the 63 publications on this LIM-domain protein to date, more than half suggest a role for LPP in tumour cell migration, invasion and metastasis. This association is reasonable when considering that LPP promotes mesenchymal cell/fibroblast migration, localizes to cellular adhesions and even promotes invadopodia formation [
38]. However, these tumorigenic and metastasis-promoting functions require LPP, while in our study, it is the loss of LPP that promotes the phenotypic dedifferentiation of VSMCs characterized by increased migration, proliferation and reduced contractile properties. Moreover, according to own analyses of the microarray data from a publicly available database, reduced LPP abundance may be related to arterial aneurysm formation and rupture in humans, another maladaptive remodelling process affecting extracellular matrix composition and stability in conduit arterial blood vessels that may originate from these cells. Thus, LPP and other Janus-faced mechanotransducers, e.g., of the YAP/TAZ signalling pathway, seem to be essential to maintaining these cells in the differentiated contractile state for normal vascular function.