Ca 2؉/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) has been implicated in the regulation of neuronal excitability in many systems. Recent studies suggest that local regulation of membrane potential can have important computational consequences for neuronal function. In Drosophila, CaMKII regulates the eag potassium channel, but if and how this regulation was spatially restricted was unknown. Calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) 1 has been shown to regulate ion channels and neuronal excitability in both vertebrates (1-6) and invertebrates (4,5,(7)(8)(9)(10)(11). Regulation of excitability has been proposed as a mechanism by which neurons can globally modify their firing to keep spike rates in a scalable range in the presence of synapse-specific plasticity (12)(13)(14). Recently, it has become clear that regulation of excitability can also occur as a local phenomenon (15-19). Regional changes in excitability mediated by differing levels of A-type potassium currents were shown to be important for gating Hebbian plasticity in CA1 pyramidal cell dendrites and limiting propagation of action potentials (19). These effects have important implications for the computational abilities of neurons that integrate over many inputs. Both slow, expression level changes and fast, enzymatic modifications could underlie local phenomena, and in CA1, local regulation of excitability was associated with both regional differences in current density (19) and region-specific post-translational modifications of ion channels (18). Fast modulation offers the advantage of dynamic retooling of the computational capability of the neuron.For signal transduction pathways to effect fast local changes in excitability, the activity of effector enzymes has to be spatially restricted. The ability of protein kinases with many substrates to act with specificity to regulate cellular functions is increasingly being ascribed to interactions with scaffolding molecules that bring kinases and their substrates into close proximity. Signaling platforms range from small complexes containing only a few proteins to very complex cellular specializations like the postsynaptic density of the mammalian central nervous system (20). The advantages of scaffolding enzymes and substrates include enhancement of reaction rates because of elimination of diffusional barriers and increased local concentration of substrates and segregation of the enzyme to prevent reaction with other substrates. Localization of effector enzymes to sources of small molecule regulators can also establish very restricted signaling domains. Scaffolding may be particularly important for regulation of membrane-bound proteins in neurons; diffusion in the membrane bilayer is relatively slow, and the ability of soluble enzymes to access substrates can be influenced by the complex geometry of neurons.The regulation of firing in Drosophila motor axons involves the ether-à -go-go (eag) potassium channel. eag is the founding member of an evolutionarily conserved superfamily of voltageg...
The phenotype and function of vascular cells in vivo are influenced by complex mechanical signals generated by pulsatile hemodynamic loading. Physiologically relevant in vitro studies of vascular cells therefore require realistic environments where in vivo mechanical loading conditions can be accurately reproduced. To accomplish a realistic in vivo-like loading environment, we designed and fabricated an Endothelial Cell Culture Model (ECCM) to generate physiological pressure, stretch, and shear stress profiles associated with normal and pathological cardiac flow states. Cells within this system were cultured on a stretchable, thin (∼500 μm) planar membrane within a rectangular flow channel and subject to constant fluid flow. Under pressure, the thin planar membrane assumed a concave shape, representing a segment of the blood vessel wall. Pulsatility was introduced using a programmable pneumatically controlled collapsible chamber. Human aortic endothelial cells (HAECs) were cultured within this system under normal conditions and compared to HAECs cultured under static and "flow only" (13 dyn/cm(2)) control conditions using microscopy. Cells cultured within the ECCM were larger than both controls and assumed an ellipsoidal shape. In contrast to static control control cells, ECCM-cultured cells exhibited alignment of cytoskeletal actin filaments and high and continuous expression levels of β-catenin indicating an in vivo-like phenotype. In conclusion, design, fabrication, testing, and validation of the ECCM for culture of ECs under realistic pressure, flow, strain, and shear loading seen in normal and pathological conditions was accomplished. The ECCM therefore is an enabling technology that allows for study of ECs under physiologically relevant biomechanical loading conditions in vitro.
Atherosclerotic lesions occur non-randomly at vascular niches in bends and bifurcations where fluid flow can be characterized as "disturbed" (low shear stress with both forward and retrograde flow). Endothelial cells (ECs) at these locations experience significantly lower average shear stress without change in the levels of pressure or strain, which affects the local balance in mechanical stresses. Common in vitro models of atherosclerosis focus primarily on shear stress without accounting for pressure and strain loading. To overcome this limitation, we used our microfluidic endothelial cell culture model (ECCM) to achieve accurate replication of pressure, strain, and shear stress waveforms associated with both normal flow seen in straight sections of arteries and disturbed flow seen in the abdominal aorta in the infrarenal segment at the wall distal to the inferior mesenteric artery (IMA), which is associated with high incidence of atherosclerotic lesion formation. Human aortic endothelial cells (HAECs) were cultured within the ECCM under both normal and disturbed flow and evaluated for cell shape, cytoskeletal alignment, endothelial barrier function, and inflammation using immunofluorescence microscopy and flow cytometry. Results clearly demonstrate quantifiable differences between cells cultured under disturbed flow conditions, which are cuboidal with short and randomly oriented actin microfilaments and show intermittent expression of b-Catenin and cells cultured under normal flow. However, in the absence of pro-inflammatory stimulation, the levels of expression of activation markers: intra cellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1), vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 (VCAM-1), platelet endothelial cell adhesion molecule-1 (PECAM-1), and vascular endothelial cell growth factor -receptor 2 (VEGF-R2) known to be involved in the initiation of plaque formation were only slightly higher in HAECs cultured under disturbed flow in comparison to cells cultured under normal flow.
A major challenge in cardiac tissue engineering is the delivery of hemodynamic mechanical cues that play a critical role in the early development and maturation of cardiomyocytes. Generation of functional cardiac tissue capable of replacing or augmenting cardiac function therefore requires physiologically relevant environments that can deliver complex mechanical cues for cardiomyocyte functional maturation. The goal of this work is the development and validation of a cardiac cell culture model (CCCM) microenvironment that accurately mimics pressure-volume changes seen in the left ventricle and to use this system to achieve cardiac cell maturation under conditions where mechanical loads such as pressure and stretch are gradually increased from the unloaded state to conditions seen in vivo. The CCCM platform, consisting of a cell culture chamber integrated within a flow loop was created to accomplish culture of 10 day chick embryonic ventricular cardiomyocytes subject to 4 days of stimulation (10 mm Hg, ~13% stretch at a frequency of 2 Hz). Results clearly show that CCCM conditioned cardiomyocytes accelerate cardiomyocyte structural and functional maturation in comparison to static unloaded controls as evidenced by increased proliferation, alignment of actin cytoskeleton, bundle-like sarcomeric α-actinin expression, higher pacing beat rate at lower threshold voltages and increased shortening. These results confirm the CCCM microenvironment can accelerate immature cardiac cell structural and functional maturation for potential cardiac regenerative applications.
Hemodynamic mechanical cues play a critical role in the early development and functional maturation of cardiomyocytes (CM). Therefore, tissue engineering approaches that incorporate immature CM into functional cardiac tissues capable of recovering or replacing damaged cardiac muscle require physiologically relevant environments to provide the appropriate mechanical cues. The goal of this work is to better understand the subcellular responses of immature cardiomyocytes using an in vitro cardiac cell culture model that realistically mimics in vivo mechanical conditions, including cyclical fluid flows, chamber pressures, and tissue strains that could be experienced by implanted cardiac tissues. Cardiomyocytes were cultured in a novel microfluidic cardiac cell culture model (CCCM) to achieve accurate replication of the mechanical cues experienced by ventricular CM. Day 10 chick embryonic ventricular CM (3.5 × 104 cell clusters per cell chamber) were cultured for 4 days in the CCCM under cyclic mechanical stimulation (10 mmHg, 8–15% stretch, 2 Hz frequency) and ventricular cells from the same embryo were cultured in a static condition for 4 days as controls. Additionally, ventricular cell suspensions and ventricular tissue from day 16 chick embryo were collected and analyzed for comparison with CCCM cultured CM. The gene expressions and protein synthesis of calcium handling proteins decreased significantly during the isolation process. Mechanical stimulation of the cultured CM using the CCCM resulted in an augmentation of gene expression and protein synthesis of calcium handling proteins compared to the 2D constructs cultured in the static conditions. Further, the CCCM conditioned 2D constructs have a higher beat rate and contractility response to isoproterenol. These results demonstrate that early mechanical stimulation of embryonic cardiac tissue is necessary for tissue proliferation and for protein synthesis of the calcium handling constituents required for tissue contractility. Thus, physiologic mechanical conditioning may be essential for generating functional cardiac patches for replacement of injured cardiac tissue.
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